Example sentences of "in these cases [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In these cases A is to a greater or lesser extent unclear , ambiguous .
2 They may even marry quite young to escape the pressures of the courting scene , but in these cases choice of partner is based more on the need for a mutual defence against a mutual problem than in hope of a mutual problem being resolved .
3 In these cases Committee and Report Stages will be combined .
4 None the less , even in these cases parents may find the concepts of ‘ disclosure ’ and ‘ involvement ’ to operate implicitly as disempowering forces .
5 In these cases abortions are legal if the mother or child is diagnosed by two doctors ( usually the G.P. and the gynaecologist performing the operation ) .
6 On the other hand , dry pellets were stronger and afforded some protection to the bones , although even in these cases skulls were broken by the single trampling event , with the only recognizable pieces left being fragments of zygomatic bone and maxilla .
7 ( In these cases flashbacks may involve little more than a ‘ graininess ’ of vision under anxiety provoking circumstances . )
8 Many of the questions did not encourage informative or useful replies and in these cases pupils discovered they had not thought of enough questions or areas for inquiry in the time allocated .
9 Thus high values of B seem to be associated with unusual situations and drivers going relatively slowly ( i.e. in these cases subjects are more likely to say ‘ No ’ than ‘ Yes ’ when they are in fact unsure whether they saw the film previously ) .
10 If she has older brothers and sisters , then the idea of sharing will be less of a shock for her , although even in these cases children cling to those things they think of as theirs .
11 In these cases judgment can be entered in default of delivery of a defence within 14 days ( Ord 9 , r 4A ) ; " fixed date actions " is therefore something of a misnomer since they more closely resemble default actions .
12 But even in these cases punishment is still something inflicted : it is an intrusion on the liberty of the person punished , which also requires a moral justification .
13 Since in these cases incorporation and public benefit were intimately linked it was also accepted that there should be a measure of state control to ensure that private interest was not allowed to predominate over the public good .
14 In these cases people focus on their own best interests and not on those of the organization as a whole .
15 In these cases verse takes on another dimension of seriousness by its juxtaposition with the prose of jest and the evasion of responsibilities .
16 It was admitted that occasionally the good were afflicted too , and that in these cases God was probably testing their faith , or even possibly allowing them their purgatory on earth , but on the whole the Church found it more satisfactory to believe that madness was punitive and well-deserved .
17 In these cases Wood concluded that ‘ the ‘ shire county ’ principle overrode that of the ending of the urban-rural dichotomy ’ ( Wood 1976 : 106 ; cf.
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