Example sentences of "the [noun] should [verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | This duly happened , and in the judgment published in November 1991 , it was held that the valuation of the estates should take into account the agricultural tenancies granted by the late Lady Fox to herself and her farming partners . |
2 | The drafter should bear in mind that many of the terms included in the standard terms will not be enforced in most transactions ; their purpose may be to deter claims from trading partners , to deter litigation , or provide a basis for a negotiated settlement . |
3 | Moreover the drafter should bear in mind that a set of standard terms , unlike a will or conveyance , is intended to be used by the client and its trading partners without legal advice . |
4 | The drafter should bear in mind that statutes and standard form documents , such as Incoterms , are altered and updated from time to time . |
5 | There is a large body of case law concerned with the meaning of particular expressions in particular contexts , but the drafter should bear in mind the cautionary words of Lord Esher MR : No general rule exists for the computation of time , either under the Bankruptcy Act or any other statute , or , indeed , where time is mentioned in a contract , and the rational mode of computation of time is to have regard in each case to the purpose for which the computation is to be made ( Re North , ex parte Hasluck [ 1895 ] 2 QB 264 ) . |
6 | Throughout the drafting process the drafter should keep in mind the objectives the terms are intended to achieve . |
7 | The money should go on patient care , not bureaucracy , he said . |
8 | ( It may seem ironical that the initial question of whether the case should go to arbitration or trial involved three hearings — two in the county court and one in the Court of Appeal . ) |
9 | ‘ It is important , ’ Lord Justice Neill said , ‘ that the courts should act with restraint before interfering with the decisions of sporting bodies , however wide-ranging their powers may be . ’ |
10 | The assessment should take into account the child 's physical , emotional and educational needs according to his age , sex , religion , culture and language . |
11 | The issue before this House was whether the action should go to proof before answer or be dismissed and proof before answer was allowed . |
12 | Welfare staff overruled an experienced detective who said the tot should stay in care . |
13 | Some believe that it is undesirable and that the diver should transfer under pressure . |
14 | The expert should bear in mind that the parties may settle the matter before he has completed his work . |
15 | The bill , which makes it an offence to carry a knife and puts the onus on the carrier to prove he had good reason to carry the knife , will have its third reading on Friday and could now become law before summer after the Scottish Office accepted a Labour amendment that the act should come into force on the day it is passed rather than at the end of a two month period . |
16 | In making the decision the parents should bear in mind that once any kind of commitment to a religion is made , it is always more difficult for there to be a change of course , even when the commitment is made on behalf of the individual when a helpless baby . |
17 | Mr Sheher , a 37-year-old black belt fifth dan , from Acklam , Middlesbrough , said doctors at the competition decided that the casualties should go to hospital . |
18 | The first stage of the Supply Chain Project which is due to be completed by the end of this month is aimed at developing a blueprint which redesigns the way the business should operate in response to these changes . |
19 | In particular the vendor should check for cross default provisions which would affect the other companies in the vendor 's group . |
20 | It is here too that the husband should act as priest within his own household , as the example and nurturer of his wife and children . |
21 | However , the purchaser should bear in mind that some of the information supplied previously is historic and revised updates should be requested . |
22 | Bullock , following suggestions in S. G. Raybould 's recent book , The English Universities and Adult Education , argued that the universities should stick to Tutorial and preparatory-Tutorial Classes , leaving the WEA as the country 's main provider of less advanced courses in liberal studies ; for this expanded role , the Association would require increased government aid to finance additional full-time posts and would also need to ‘ get rid of those characteristics to which its critics have often pointed … conservatism , parochialism and class-consciousness ’ . |
23 | He proposed a regency council to uphold the validity of Frederick 's election until the heir should come of age . |
24 | When examining the programme , the engineer should look for compatibility of time/location charts and detailed programmes |
25 | This is no doubt a matter which the magistrate should take into account when considering whether a witness 's evidence is to be rejected as worthless ; and I have no doubt that in the present case the magistrate did take it into account , together with the fact that Price had retracted his earlier evidence implicating the applicant , when deciding whether to make an order for committal . |
26 | The draftsman should bear in mind that any restriction will be construed against the firm in whose interest it purports to be imposed . |
27 | Where the landlord is himself a leaseholder , the draftsman should have in mind the length of the landlord 's own lease . |
28 | A Yorkshire Post reader suggested that the King should resign as patron of the Football Association . |
29 | Board secretary John Morris said : ‘ The Board 's main consideration was whether the title should remain on ice or whether this contest could be accepted for that championship . |
30 | ( 2 ) That no stay was to be imposed unless a defendant established on the balance of probabilities that , owing to the delay , he would suffer serious prejudice to the extent that no fair trial could be held , in that the continuation of the prosecution amounted to a misuse of the process of the court ; that , in assessing whether there was likely to be prejudice and if so whether it could properly be described as serious , the court should bear in mind the trial judge 's power at common law and under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 to regulate the admissibility of evidence , the trial process itself which should ensure that all relevant factual issues arising from delay would be placed before the jury as part of the evidence for their consideration , and the judge 's powers to give appropriate directions before the jury considered their verdict ; and that , accordingly , the judge 's decision to stay the proceedings had been wrong , since such delay as there had been was not unjustifiable , the chances of prejudice were remote , the degree of potential prejudice was small , the powers of the judge and the trial process itself would have provided ample protection for the police officer , there was no danger of the trial being unfair and in any event the case was not exceptional so as to justify the ruling ( post , p. 19B–E ) . |