Example sentences of "provide by one " in BNC.

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1 This is partly thanks to the free insurance provided by one of the World Cup sponsors and partly historical perspective .
2 This is a far cry from the procedures under the Police Act 1964 , where mutual aid may be provided by one force to another , but only after a request from the latter .
3 Access was provided by one staircase and goods were stored either directly on the platform floors or on low racking .
4 A BARONET with a 1,300-acre estate is so hard up he has been reduced to eating free spuds provided by one of his tenant farmers .
5 The finance had been provided by one of his banks in co-operation with French and German organizations to give the place an international reputation .
6 Open access radiology services provided by one non-teaching district in England .
7 Cutting back on the staff of regulatory agencies was one ploy used , and , according to figures provided by one source , in eleven selected agencies there was an average 29 per cent decline in permanent staff positions during Reagan 's first term ; including falls of 53 per cent in the Federal Grain Inspection Service , 41 per cent in the Interstate Commerce Commission , 38 per cent in the Consumer Product Safety Commission , 32 per cent in the Federal Trade Commission and 21 per cent in the Environmental Protection Agency .
8 An excellent example of the role of a place as a focus of collective identity is provided by one of the major events in British industrial relations in recent decades — the National Union of Mineworkers ' strike of March 1984 to March 1985 .
9 An important element in training for ordination is provided by one or more parish placements .
10 Family allowances were provided by one of the last measures of the coalition government .
11 Musical entertainment was provided by one of Norway 's most talented soprano singers Bodil Arnesen .
12 Another amusing , but really quite typical example which transparently reveals the father-protest behind all other protests is provided by one of the cases cited in the study from which I have already quoted at length :
13 Benefits provided by one locality may spill over into another jurisdiction .
14 An example is provided by one Parkinson , a Victorian clean-up campaigner , whose moral objection to " public dancing " led him to allege that a ballet at the Royal Aquarium had involved a Japanese female catching a butterfly " in the most indecent place you could possibly imagine . "
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