Example sentences of "[is] primarily [vb pp] at " in BNC.

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1 However , in legitimating these tasks , the legal framework established by the state has inevitably suffered from some confusion over whether it is primarily directed at helping families to achieve social control of their children or at ratifying state intervention .
2 Western diplomats have concluded that the Soviet Union 's proposal to stage a ‘ Helsinki II ’ summit next year is primarily aimed at eliminating any ambiguities about the ‘ inner-German ’ frontier , and enshrining the existence of the two German states in the Helsinki Declaration in a way that would virtually rule out reunification .
3 The first to enjoy any degree of commercial success was SideKick which is primarily aimed at the technical user rather than the businessman .
4 In the case of a small private business , the use is primarily aimed at invoicing , accounting and stock control activities .
5 The school 's use is primarily aimed at familiarisation training for pupils .
6 Although this disk is primarily aimed at the professional market like advertising agencies , broadcasters and newspapers it could also prove invaluable research material for schools , colleges , and local theatre groups .
7 Mailing DLabel is primarily aimed at the user who wants to print out a run of mailing labels , or serialised labels for whatever purpose , and for those two tasks , it is admirable .
8 The Committee acknowledged that the report is primarily aimed at the government 's policy for shifting the balance between food production and environmental care .
9 The Green Paper , said the IPM , ’ is primarily aimed at particular abuses which it is the duty of Government to address in order to protect the rights of the individual . ’
10 create the illusion that the ‘ dangerous ’ class is primarily located at the bottom of various hierarchies by which we ‘ measure ’ each other , such as occupational prestige , income level , housing market location , educational achievement , racial attributes — in this illusion it fuses relative poverty and criminal propensities and sees them both as effects of moral inferiority , thus rendering the ‘ dangerous ’ class deserving of both poverty and punishment ;
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