Example sentences of "also be made [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Evaluations may also be made of the whole work group so that judgements are made of workers ' attitudes and performance at both levels . |
2 | Mention should also be made of the French theologian Auguste Sabatier ( 1839–1901 ) , through whom the movement also made some impact on the French Roman Catholic Modernists , notably A. F. Loisy ( 1857–1940 ) . |
3 | Any cross-sectional type of analysis can also be made with a longitudinal study but , in addition , the aggregation of changes in individuals can be looked at . |
4 | Reference must also be made to a brief but important statement by the Privy Council , in the course of an elaborate opinion , largely concerned with other matters , in Government of the United States of America v. Bowe [ 1990 ] 1 A.C. 500 . |
5 | Reference should also be made to the Specific Claims Handling Instructions , especially to calculate written down value . |
6 | Reference may also be made to the relevant Domesday texts and the published volumes of the curia regis and other rolls , some of which make useful contributions to local knowledge . |
7 | In the case of a student the report will also be made to the relevant member of academic staff . |
8 | Reference should also be made to the recent House of Lords decision in Kirklees MBC v. Wickes Building Supplies Ltd [ 1992 ] NLJ 967 . |
9 | General SA ( see also ) references may also be made to an entire group of headings as an economy measure , for instance , |
10 | A distinction should also be made between the particular style of character dance known in all the leading schools and the true folk dance performed by the people of a country . |
11 | A defendant 's costs order may also be made in the following circumstances : ( 1 ) by a magistrates ' court where an information has been laid before magistrates but not proceeded with ; or where the magistrates ' court inquiring into an indictable offence as examining justices determines not to commit the accused for trial ; ( 2 ) by the Crown Court where the defendant is not tried for an offence for which he or she had been indicted or committed for trial ; or the defendant who has been convicted of an offence before a magistrates ' court appeals against conviction or sentence and , in consequence of that appeal , the conviction is set aside or a less severe punishment is awarded ; ( 3 ) by the Divisional Court where it deals with any criminal appeal ; ( 4 ) by the Court of Appeal where it allows an appeal against conviction or sentence or on such an appeal finds the defendant guilty of a different offence or imposes a different sentence ; ( 5 ) by the House of Lords where it determines a criminal appeal , or application for leave to appeal . |