Example sentences of "subject [adv] to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Much of policy-implementation today requires positive action by government officials — it is no longer a case of making rules and leaving the citizen to get on with observing them , subject only to policing .
2 to be designed , developed and maintained to the highest achievable standards of data processing , subject only to resource constraints ; and
3 Held , allowing the appeal , that section 69(1) of the Housing Act 1985 imposed a duty on housing authorities to exercise their discretion in deciding what constituted suitable accommodation for persons whom they had a duty to house under section 65(2) of the Act ; that any decision on suitability necessarily depended on the circumstances prevailing at the time and called for a subjective judgment by a housing authority to be made before the performance of the executive act of securing suitable accommodation for an applicant ; and that the duty imposed by section 69(1) was to be exercised by housing authorities subject only to challenge by way of proceedings for judicial review in the High Court , and not on their merits by an action in the county court ( post , pp. 213E–H , 214B–C , 218A–C ) .
4 The core studies comprise Architectural History courses taken alongside other clearly associated courses ( either history of art or architectural science , according to the student 's choice ) , while a third course in each year is chosen by the student from all subjects in the Faculties of Arts , Science or Social Sciences , subject only to compatibility of timetable .
5 Furthermore , the sense of mouth ( of river ) is stable across a variety of contexts ( i.e. subject only to modulation ) provided that ‘ of river ’ is understood .
6 In ‘ error or omission ’ cases , i.e. in cases coming within paragraphs ( d ) to ( h ) , an indemnity would , if rectification were refused , be available under section 83(2) , subject always to section 83(5) ( a ) .
7 Section 5 provided that , subject always to section 7(3) , it was the general duty of the LTE to exercise and perform their functions with due regard to efficiency , economy and safety of operation .
8 This is drawn up by the curriculum committee , which argues that since God , death , suffering and the purpose of life are all at the heart of religion , and since children sometimes ask questions about them , the class teacher should not only teach about these matters , but be subject both to assessment procedures and to official inspection .
9 The Board also succeeded in 1977 in persuading Ministers that , since the deprave and corrupt test would be applied by the BBFC in assessing the suitability of films for exhibition to the public , those same films should not suffer ‘ double jeopardy ’ in the sense of being subject both to censorship through prior restraint and also to the risk of private prosecutions for obscenity .
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