Example sentences of "by [art] [noun pl] [prep] that [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 To a great extent a manufacturer 's choice of distributive intermediaries is governed by the members in that channel .
2 Does the Minister agree that such waste should be treated or disposed of not by the producers of that waste , but by some other body which may be more independent with regard to financial considerations ?
3 By applying judgements to the curriculum itself , evaluation by the users of that curriculum can be brought into the classroom , evaluation can be made to serve as a basis for new directions in the process of teaching and learning … it can shape and guide learning and guide decisions within the curriculum process .
4 Before 1833 only British and Burgher lawyers were allowed to practise in Colombo courts , but this restriction was lifted by the reforms of that year , and by the mid-century few British lawyers practised in Sri Lanka .
5 This decision would have had the effect of making a software designer 's choice of storage medium crucial to the question of patentability but it was , fortunately , quickly overruled in the Court of Appeal where Lord Justice Nicholls said : It would equally be nonsense if a floppy disc [ sic ] containing a computer program was not patentable that a ROM characterised only by the instructions in that program should be patentable
6 For those given by Buxton as missing on operation ‘ Gain' — listed by name , rank and number as Leslie and his men — approximates to the total of S.A.S. troops now known to have been captured and executed by the Germans on that operation in the Forét de Fontainebleau , south of Paris .
7 The traditional theory [ of employment ] maintains , in short , that the wage bargains between the entrepreneurs and the workers determine the real wage ; so that , assuming free competition amongst employers and no restrictive combinations amongst workers , the latter can , if they wish , bring their real wages into conformity with the marginal disutility of employment offered by the employers at that wage .
8 1.30 In a serious personal injury case or in a fatal case the initial calculations of loss of earnings or dependency may be made very soon after the accident , based on wage rates provided by the employers at that time .
9 Typical is the wording of Article 35 which states that ‘ Acceptance by the third organisation of such an obligation shall be governed by the rules of that organisation . ’
10 ( 1 ) In all the circumstances is it more appropriate that a court of the country to which a child has been wrongfully removed or in which it is being wrongfully retained ( country B ) ’ — in this case one can say England — ‘ should reach decisions and make orders with a view to its welfare or is it more appropriate that this should be done by a court of the country from which it was removed or to which its return has been wrongfully prevented ( [ Australia ] ) ? ( 2 ) If , but only if , the answer to the first question is that the court of [ England ] is the more appropriate court , should that court give any consideration whatsoever to what further orders should be made other than for the immediate return of the child to [ Australia ] and for ensuring its welfare pending the resumption or assumption of jurisdiction by the courts of that country ?
11 There were no recommendations by the judges under that section in the cases with which we are now concerned .
12 Exhausted by the horrors of that day , I slept heavily .
13 If , on the other hand , one focuses on the production that is undertaken by the residents of that country , the income earned by nationals from abroad has to be added to the gross domestic product , to arrive at the gross national product .
14 I took some measures through the Arts Council to help the cash flows of some of the institutions that were threatened by the delays in that funding .
15 In Strathclyde alone , nearly three out of every five cases were not pursued to court , a statistic which provides ‘ considerable support for the view that a policy of mass arrests was pursued by the police in that area ’ ( Wallington , 1985 : 150 ) .
16 Rule 2.8 stipulates that a person making a statement that he does not intend to make an offer for a company will normally be bound by the terms of that statement .
17 On their return to shore they were joined by the sailors of that place with loud huzzes , who together paraded the streets with drums beating and colours flying .
18 At the end of the reign John 's desperate situation produced a further crop of charters of disafforestment in 1215 — for the remainder of Cornwall in return for a fine of 1,200 marks and four palfreys paid by the men of that county ; for Nassaburgh hundred in Northamptonshire , for which the Abbot of Peterborough paid 1,220 marks ; and for the Abbot of Abbey Dore 's lands in Treville Forest , for which the abbot paid 600 marks and ten palfreys .
19 Oakeshott , for example , indicates that the only relevant criticism within a mode is by the methods of that mode .
20 Which type of support a young person receives should be determined entirely by the needs of that person rather than by slotting her or him into inflexible institutional alternatives .
21 Taxes Act 1988 , s678 deals with the situation where capital sums are paid by a connected company to the settlor and where there have been associated payments made by the trustees to that company .
22 Such low relief is found in Greek art too ; but Greek sculptors seem to have begun with free-standing statues , and when they came to relief their approach was affected by the conventions of that art .
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