Example sentences of "have [verb] [prep] account " in BNC.

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1 The Court had approved the payment of fees up to 15 April and since then , with the authority of the Court and the approval of the creditors ' committee , Touche has drawn on account fees that have not yet been formally approved .
2 ‘ Here I Am ’ has taken into account the development of the National Curriculum and aims to ensure that the quality of Religious Education is as challenging and demanding as other areas of the children 's learning .
3 This draft response indicates which DTAC responses he has taken into account , and any member whose DTAC 's response has arrived late or has been omitted for some other reason can ensure that relevant points are not missed .
4 Moreover , it is difficult for anyone but the manager to have available all the information he or she has taken into account at the point of decision , and hence it is difficult to monitor the manager .
5 In certain cases the ordering of a retrial will be the appropriate solution where the damages appear excessive because the jury has taken into account irrelevant matters , or has not considered relevant matters ( Rubber Improvement Ltd v.
6 The upshot of it is that the appellate court , where the matter is one of discretion , as this is of course , will not interfere with the discretion of the court below unless it considers that the court was plainly wrong or it has erred in principle , that it has taken into account something it should not have done or has failed to take into account something it should have done , and on that narrow basis I must proceed with this appeal .
7 In considering the level of the dividend , the Board has taken into account the current results of the Company and its significant future capital investment programme .
8 The planning so far has taken into account the needs of the strategic company plan and the opportunities for achieving it in terms of products and markets .
9 In conducting this review the University has taken into account the feasibility of raising the necessary funding from outside sources .
10 However , managing these principles has to take into account the fact that :
11 The mutual help system has to take into account things like holidays and emergency backup .
12 In doing so , the Church has to take into account ‘ the Tradition ’ — the consensus of teaching and practice down the centuries .
13 A national policy on cooking energy also has to take into account the increasing interaction between the energy needs of the urban and rural areas .
14 The latter , though , might just be assimilated to the factors that the subject has to take into account under operant conditioning .
15 Any action has to be additional to member states ' own policies ; it has to take into account the views of the region ; it has to be adopted unanimously by the Council , and the European Parliament ( EP ) can veto it .
16 Now the holder of speculative balances not only has to consider the yield on close substitutes such as bonds , but he also has to take into account any prospective capital gains or losses which may accrue when buying the bond .
17 Any description of the service sector has to take into account the legacy of what has become known as the Fisher/Clark thesis or the ‘ three-sector , model of economic growth .
18 Corporate strategy in manufacturing thus has to take into account the fact that organizations that are able rapidly to adapt to change have a competitive advantage in the face of changing technology and volatile product markets .
19 It may take some time to program this technique as it has to take into account all foreseeable circumstances .
20 The design of policy has to take into account the ambiguity of the welfare analysis outlined in the previous section .
21 Pressure-group activity is only one factor that the government has to take into account in deciding policy , and the group 's importance to the government and community is susceptible of various interpretations .
22 However , for a discount security with more than six months ( 182 days ) to maturity , the bond equivalent yield has to take into account the fact that the corresponding bond makes two coupon payments and that interest is earned by investing the first coupon .
23 When investing abroad , an investor has to take into account a number of factors that are not relevant when investing in the domestic economy .
24 We have had to take into account the changes in the international situation when considering the RNR , including the lengthening warning time .
25 In our attempt to understand the diversity of tropical forests , using largely the example of the trees , we have had to take into account all the features of the plant that would appear to reflect the forces of natural selection in terms of physical factors : meteorological , topographical , pedological , and biotic ones .
26 The value of the offer made by the bonorum emptor would certainly have taken into account the fact that the land was subject to trust ; the consequence of the lower offer would be that creditors would receive rather less than if no trust existed .
27 ( c ) Government Bills Before a Bill enters the House , a government will have put its proposals in legislative form , it will have consulted various interest groups affected and it will have taken into account the strength of feeling amongst its supporters in Parliament and in the country at large .
28 He could also have taken into account , if he was aware of it , that the effect of requiring an undertaking in damages from the council would be to cause the collapse of the law enforcement process in this area of law ; and further that the enforcement of the law was not merely desirable as such in the public interest , but that small retailers could well suffer if large retailers such as Wickes were able to continue to trade with impunity during a significant period in contravention of what might well prove to be a perfectly valid law .
29 In his view , the court could intervene only if the minister ( a ) failed or refused to apply his mind to or to consider the question whether to refer a complaint to the committee or ( b ) misinterpreted the law or proceeded on an erroneous view of the law or ( c ) based his decision on some wholly extraneous consideration or ( d ) failed to have regard to matters which he should have taken into account .
30 Spelt out slightly more fully ( and at the risk of oversimplification ) , this means that a decision is open to review where it has been arrived at as a result of a mistaken view of the law , or where the decision is one that could not reasonably have been arrived at , in the sense that the person deciding must have taken into account irrelevant considerations , or failed to take into account relevant ones , or where he has failed to observe the dictates of natural justice which require him to give the parties a hearing before arriving at his decision .
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