Example sentences of "be [vb pp] to in the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The position with regard to side letters ( setting out supplemental agreements ) is that they may not be binding as they probably will not have been referred to in the principal agreement .
2 The close relationship between criterion-referenced assessment and the curriculum has been referred to in the previous section .
3 The aims of the legislation and the expectations of those responsible for it are referred to in the following passage :
4 These are all the potential problems we are exposed to in the twentieth century .
5 The law has not been adhered to in the recent years , as it was in the past and every night when you 're out you usually see more than one cyclist driving without lights , often on the pavement .
6 A DoH press release states that ‘ access to records will be free except when they have not been added to in the previous 40 days .
7 ‘ The Black Sea at 24C in the summer is twice what belugas are used to in the Arctic .
8 Even here , however , status still reared its head , for Louis XIV clearly thought it derogated from his dignity as a ruler by divine right to be referred to in the final treaty in the same terms as William III , the mere constitutional king of a parliamentary state .
9 They sat together in the darkness , in front of the log fire which was welcome on a summer night suddenly grown cool , and Molly wondered why S. Kettering should be referred to in the past tense .
10 Ramcom 's existing cards can already be read by radio thanks to a built-in transceiver , but the new In-Charge cards can also be written to in the same way .
11 Small incidents may be over-reacted to in the strong anticipation of trouble , rendering it more likely that confrontation will actually occur .
12 I believe that the out-half position will prove troublesome for the Lions in New Zealand as I would have serious reservations about Stuart Barnes being the right player under the type of physical pressure he is likely to be subjected to in the important matches .
13 As with the state as a whole , the permeability of state agencies to civil society depends upon the balance of power between classes and interest groups , a point that will be returned to in the following chapter in connection with state enterprises .
14 This is an important point which will be returned to in the next chapter .
15 The creation of highly selective band-pass or band-stop filters based on appropriate resonant branches has been alluded to in the previous section .
16 I 've got enough just to manage , but things are n't what they should be and it 's not what we were used to in the old days . ’
17 Erm , the agency has considered a paper on this as is referred to in the final paragraph , what it 's basically suggesting to the Department of the Environment and the Home Office is , is that a formula is based upon the supply factors er , such as the , the number of fire stations and standard crew levels etcetera .
18 This picture is added to in the next chapter where we examine the informal relations that exist within organisations , and in Chapter 6 where we examine power .
19 In certain circumstances it may become necessary to seek waivers from the Law Society , as for instance : ( 1 ) where the new office is no more than a consulting room open for restricted periods , when a waiver would normally be granted provided ( a ) the opening hours are sufficiently advertised ; ( b ) during those hours there is always in attendance a person duly qualified to manage or supervise the office and that all correspondence is seen by a partner of the firm ; and ( c ) the business of the consultancy is accounted for centrally and not as a separate business ; or ( 2 ) where the new office is an annexe ( whether housing a separate department or otherwise ) near to the main office , when a waiver could be expected to be granted if ( a ) a common switchboard is used for both main office and annexe ; ( b ) accounts are centralised ; ( c ) correspondence is attended to in the main office ; and ( d ) clients are asked to address correspondence to the main office .
20 Although the now frequently-used concept of ‘ the right to resistance ’ was referred to in the older religion-based natural law theories , it is mainly the more recent , secularised version of natural law with its emphasis on human rights that seems to provide a theoretical underpinning for some of the assertions about the illegality of nuclear war and the justifiability of nuclear protest .
21 This was called ‘ ganging a sitting ’ in Hawkshead , and it was referred to in the same terms across the country at Dent .
22 It is perhaps interesting to note that , despite the urgency of the situation , the convention that the accident investigation authority of one State communicates with the accident investigation authority of another State and the airworthiness authority of one State communicates with the airworthiness authority of another State was adhered to in the alerting procedure .
  Next page