Example sentences of "[prep] the [noun] [verb] in the " in BNC.

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1 If it is warm enough for the patient to sit in the garden , he may enjoy just watching all the garden life .
2 That 's compensation , is it for the tenants living in the flats ?
3 The plan was for the Unit to reform in the middle of this year .
4 Clause 10.2 of Precedent 2 provides an express right for the buyer to cancel in the event of breach by the seller .
5 For these reasons and for the reasons given in the judgment of Scott L.J. , I , too , would allow this appeal .
6 I also agree that for the reasons given in the judgment of Scott L.J .
7 My Lords , for the reasons given in the speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend , Lord Slynn of Hadley , which I have had the opportunity of reading in draft and with which I agree , I would dismiss this appeal .
8 My Lords , for the reasons contained in the speech of my noble and learned friend , Lord Ackner , which I have had the opportunity of reading in draft , I , too , would allow the appeal and restore the order of Buckley J.
9 The filter electrolytics C3 and C5 must have a low ESR ( ‘ effective series resistance no closing ’ ) for the reasons mentioned in the article .
10 On the one hand , the sampling process had to generate as many categories of user as possible and so account for the variations found in the known sample relating to age , sex , class , township , and so on .
11 Bake at 170°C ( 325°F/Gas Mark 3 ) , allowing 40 minutes for the cakes baked in the small basins and 55 minutes for the cake baked in the large basin .
12 This regulation was exploited by over 1,000 pro-Indian individuals and organizations each applying for the opportunity to participate in the hearings and thereby assist Harper in delaying a vote .
13 Writing about the passage of the Bill through Parliament , Nigel Warner suggests that the net result of the fact that Abse 's Bill merely amended earlier legislation prohibiting homosexual behaviour , rather than repealing it , is that such behaviour remains unlawful , except for the circumstances included in the new Act , and he quotes Norman St John Stevas ' recognition of this fact .
14 They had driven up to Maine for the weekend to stay in the house on the coast owned by Cameron 's aunt .
15 Where part of a building is let off as a separate factory the landlord will be responsible for providing and maintaining in efficient working order and good repair sufficient and suitable sanitary conveniences for the persons employed in the factory ( Factories Act 1961 , s7(1) , s122 ) .
16 There was therefore no further step for the justices to take in the process of committing Mr. Bell for trial or in the conduct of his trial .
17 The protections for the public envisaged in the consultation document are completely inadequate and the Lord Chancellor 's Advisory committee must think again about its approach . ’
18 Source code listings for the programs described in the book are available on disk .
19 We have assumed that exports amount to £3,000 million and that imports are £4,000 million ; the external sector has a surplus of £1,000 million ( this does of course represent an unfavourable balance of payments for the country represented in the model ) .
20 IN SEPTEMBER 1868 A REVOLUTIONARY JUNTA in Spain , led as usual by an army general , decided that the only way forward for the country lay in the removal of Queen Isabella , whose political incompetence , combined with a certain laxity of morals , made her unfit to continue to rule .
21 On the ground floor is a section for the girls employed in the works .
22 2.4.2 as may be [ reasonably ] required by the Architect provided that no modification shall be made pursuant to this clause 2.4.2 which would substantially alter the design layout nature capacity or standard of construction of the Premises as provided for in the Building Documents or substantially prejudice the use of the Premises for the purpose specified in the Lease It may be preferable to substitute the word " materially " for the word " substantially " in clause 2.4.2 as the latter suggests that some alteration less than substantial may be permitted but which could result in not inconsequential prejudice occurring to the design or use of the premises .
23 United have not given up hope of signing the England international despite having a formally faxed £3.5 million offer for the striker thrown in the bin by Sheffield Wednesday last Friday , after a verbal offer had been refused the previous week .
24 Although he was the first to use motor transport on an extensive scale in Lewis — many a time as a youngster I ran a mile to see his fleet of yellow Fords — he failed to see that the advent of the bus made it possible for the crofter to live in the country and work in the town .
25 The second and probably more serious problem for the sector arises in the context of ABTA remaining a cartel .
26 Hence I take the view that the absence of any reference to the criterion of proportionality in the B. & Q. judgment is not of fundamental importance and that the reason for the omission lay in the specific circumstances of the case , from which it was clear that any obstacles which might be created were not particularly serious .
27 Since no objective accident data were available for the areas shown in the films used in this study , it is not possible to define certain films as exemplars of risky junctions a priori .
28 2 Prohibition of entry to anyone working for the companies involved in the competition , including the sponsors , publishing house and competition handlers , advertising or public relations consultants .
29 As it is , governments of developing countries collect far less tax in relation to their gross domestic product than do industrialized countries — 14 per cent compared with 36 per cent for the countries studied in the 1986 World Bank Report .
30 These include MINIM and MAIS for the systems installed in the Ministry of Agriculture , Fisheries and Food , MAISY for the Cabinet Office , ARM in Trade and Industry and FMIS for the Department of Education and Science .
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