Example sentences of "and hence [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | But we always do have such a choice and hence no sentence has observational consequences all its own . |
2 | If there was no asset specificity , then there would be no commitment on either side , and hence no problem . |
3 | A bad burn could mean no usable clinker and hence no pay . |
4 | Weismann , who was the first to raise so many important questions , suggested that animals senesce because , if they did not , there could be no successive replacement of individuals and hence no evolution . |
5 | This is because ( 1 ) the future earnings of and dividend payments on shares are unknown and have to be forecast ; ( 2 ) there is no maturity date and hence no maturity value ; and ( 3 ) shares are the riskiest investments to hold , having the residual claim on the firm 's assets and the net income generated by these assets , so that the appropriate discount rate is very difficult to calculate . |
6 | He distinguished Ex parte Good , 5 Ch.D. 46 in that there the other debtor had already been made bankrupt and hence no claim could be made against him . |
7 | : the computer has no knowledge of the biology or chemistry involved in the digestive process , and hence no conception of the way in which the intake of food satiates hunger ; |
8 | However , since managers can also offer a coupon for the bonds — and hence a yield — which is more or less competitive by taking a higher risk , the overall price must also contain elements of the deviation of the yield from that which would be obtained from other competing intermediaries . |
9 | One possibility for the decrease in antral carcinomas over time is a decrease in H pylori infection and hence a fall in the prevalence of chronic gastritis . |
10 | If the duty is framed in subjective terms , as we have seen , the practical effect is not to impose a duty but to confer a discretion and hence a management which is not disposed to sacrifice profits ( or otherwise depart from its chosen course ) in order to advance other interests will not be compelled to alter its behaviour . |
11 | In cases where there were guilty pleas the defendants had almost invariably committed offences on several different occasions , and hence a defence that all the women consented would not be credible . |
12 | There were thus several attempts to avoid the conclusion that there must have been a big bang singularity and hence a beginning of time . |
13 | Imports are cheaper to consumers and hence a rise in the volume of imports is to be expected , as the cost of the goods excluding the tariff has risen but the domestic price of the goods including the CET has fallen . |
14 | The hardest problems are those where simple processes are hard to find , usually because of some complexity of the puzzle which makes it hard to see the effects of moves , or those where the basic coordinate system and hence a notation is hard to find . |
15 | Now the voltage drop across a typical red l.e.d. will be about 2.2V when it is supplied with a normal value of forward current ( in the range 10 to 18mA ) and hence a voltage of about 6.8V ( 9–2.2V ) will appear across R6 . |
16 | The increase in the cost of repaying mortgages ( the greatest component of the average family 's budget ) caused a reduction in the amount of money available for general consumption and hence a reduction in living standards . |
17 | One of the main arguments for Big Bang was that the abolition of the minimum commission system would result in competition and hence a reduction in commissions and overall transactions costs for investors . |
18 | If the firm can expand its production it will lead to a reduction in average cost and hence a reduction in price , not only in the overseas market but also in the home market , which may lead to further domestic market expansion . |
19 | New shares are applied for on the expectation that the issue will be underpriced and hence a profit might be made on the difference between the immediate market price and the issue or striking price . |
20 | For while he goes to some lengths to avoid formulating a question which presupposes the distinction between subject and object , he is frankly concerned to provide an answer ( and hence a question ) which will be compatible with the claim that social changes are overdetermined by the complex whole , and which will therefore embody a particular view of the production of knowledge . |
21 | Much as the regimes of Eastern Europe might welcome the support of their neighbours against Moscow — and hence a strengthening of such multilateral forums — they also view their neighbours as rival claimants to Moscow 's favour and are wary of giving them a greater voice in their own affairs . |
22 | The distinction is explicable on the basis that directorship has not been regarded by the courts as a profession , and hence a director is not expected to satisfy a higher standard , for example that of the reasonably competent business manager , simply by virtue of holding office . |
23 | Therefore , one can not locate the priming effect in a semantic sub-system of the mental lexicon , nor in a phonological sub-system , and hence a model of the mental lexicon involving just these two sub-systems is untenable . |
24 | " Some of the groups " , the White Paper said , " found themselves attempting to reconcile a wish for strict emissions targets , and hence a wish to phase out all fossil fuel burning , with a dislike for the nuclear option and support for coal in the short term . |
25 | These result in short lifetimes for the upper states , and hence a loss of definition of the energy levels . |
26 | Such a decline would lead to a decline in total money wages being paid out and hence a decline in the demand for consumption goods . |
27 | It can be noted that the ‘ Keynesian ’ perspective has links with the social optimality approach to public finance as it incorporates market ( economy ) failure and hence a role for government . |
28 | Since they would do this on foot , many vehicle journeys ( and hence a lot of pollution ) would be saved . |
29 | Because the assessment is internal , there is flexibility in its timing and hence a student can work towards a module at his or her own pace . |
30 | This was also a period of rapid industrialisation , and hence a period of high labour demand . |