Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [noun] [verb] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ( a ) Irresponsible firms discharge toxic waste with no thought for the damage inflicted on others . |
2 | The tax on fossil fuels proposed by the European Commission would be less costly than paying for the damage caused by acid rain , according to a report by Greenpeace . |
3 | This allows time for the patient to settle in hospital , for nursing and medical staff to complete their respective ( psychological and physical ) assessments of the patient and for investigations and special preparations to be carried out . |
4 | Polish-born Tomasz Starzewski , one of Diana 's favourite designers , was also responsible for the gown worn by Victoria Lockwood for her marriage to Viscount Althorp . |
5 | Erm I think it 's also now pretty much common ground that the capacity of York city is around three thousand three hundred , but I think in in in taking an view on that , and in taking any view o on future windfalls , it is necessary for the panel to keep in mind that historically in the nineteen eighties windfalls were coming through at a time when it was not a adopted local plan for the city of York , so to some extent anything by definition of a substantial size was likely to be a windfall , erm , but also more to the point than that definitional point , I would expect to see , and I think what Mr Curtis has said earlier on that the local plan is likely to tighten up on criteria for release of sites , both small and large , he referred to the shortage of open space , and I would expect to see a policy change in short , a policy climate change , within the city of York that would constrain past historical rates of windfall release . |
6 | While Coleridge waited for the sun to set behind Dowsborough and Higher Hare Knap , he wrote the first fluent draft of a poem reworked soon afterwards as ‘ This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison ’ . |
7 | Certainly the obligation to perform military service for the king existed in Skåne in 1085 , for it is mentioned ( as expeditio ) in St Cnut 's donation to a church in Lund in that year , the only surviving Danish royal charter from before 1100 . |
8 | The commissioners , answerable to the committee for the army chaired by Robert Scawen MP , were intermediaries between Parliament and the New Model Army , ultimately responsible for all financial accounts , and with authority to stop any soldier 's pay . |
9 | Ralph had been drafted for the army to fight against Scotland in a bloody civil war that had torn the country apart . |
10 | Except for the ones based on RAM chips ( WISARD and logical neural nets ) , they tolerate noisy training sets . |
11 | Events in the cities would unfold much as Marx had envisaged , with a phase of bourgeois rule culminating in proletarian revolution , but there was no need for the peasantry to pass through capitalism . |
12 | Digital , the world 's second-biggest computer company , has a major presence in Livingston and a microchip unit at South Queensferry which supplies the Alpha chip for the hard-ware assembled at Ayr and Galway . |
13 | It is extraordinary that it is easier for the EC to export to Hungary , Czechoslovakia and Poland than it is for those countries to export to the EC . |
14 | The main concerns , such as that of the RCN about the failure to specifically mention paediatric for the UKCC to implement for act upon for some reason , but they do at the very least deserve to be addressed in public . |
15 | It would comprise a basic allowance to compensate for the restrictions imposed by disability , regardless of whether the person was employed or not , together with an income maintenance element — a pension paid when employment was interrupted or employment capacity was reduced partially by disability . |
16 | Their successful research is the basis for the strategies incorporated into BIOSYM software . |
17 | Owen Rees displays an enviable acquaintance with potential sources of indigenous origin for the texts chosen by composers ( or their employers or patrons ) for setting . |
18 | As long as the Irish Republic provides a safe haven for substantial numbers of known terrorists , the British people will hold the Irish people in some measure responsible for the tragedies wrought by terrorism . |
19 | The organization for the event fell to Sybille , who was expected to invite some of her friends and family to lend an authentic French air to the proceedings . |
20 | The FRED does not deal with accounting for warrants and options issued to employees under employee share schemes for the reasons explained at paragraphs ix xiv above . |
21 | It is felt that the conventional conveyancing procedure should be adhered to for the reasons stated in Chapter 3 . |
22 | The Regional Council does not accept that to contribute to the HP4 supply land must , per se , be the subject of completions only in the period 1991–96 , for the reasons given in para 5 above . |
23 | I agree that these appeals should be dismissed for the reasons given by Dillon L.J . |
24 | For the reasons given by Dillon L.J. , I therefore agree that , as would have occurred in every common law jurisdiction and probably in most others , both appeals should be dismissed . |
25 | I agree that this appeal should be dismissed for the reasons given by Scott and Steyn L.JJ . |
26 | This has happened in a number of developed countries — though not for the reasons given by Marx but primarily because of the growth of government and restrictive practices in labour markets . |
27 | I also consider ( though this may only be expressing the same conclusion in another way ) that , for the reasons given by Mr. Langley , the injunction as at present framed should be interpreted as not prohibiting compliance with the section 39 notice . |
28 | who agreed that the appeal should be dismissed for the reasons given by Fox L.J. , Lloyd L.J . |
29 | The RSPCA has always been in favour of whips being carried for the reasons outlined by Luhnenschloss , but its assistant chief veterinary officer , Alastair Mews , said : ‘ Future decisions can no longer be left to tradition , habit , or hearsay but must be based on good science . |
30 | Local income taxes might be thought capable of performing better against the criterion of equity , but it was argued that they would be difficult to administer in the UK , for the reasons outlined by Kay and King ( 1986 ) . |