Example sentences of "on [art] [noun] of [noun pl] ' " in BNC.

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1 So absorbed was she in the effort of preparing herself mentally for what lay ahead that she did not glance upstream as she drove across Cookham Bridge and wonder why there were no party-goers gathered round a marquee on the lawn of Swans ' Meadow , why indeed there was no marquee pitched on the lawn at all .
2 The foregoing conclusions regarding the inability of the professional participant in the stock market to consistently produce excess returns is at variance with some of the work on the performance of brokers ' advisory services .
3 Evidence of disparity on the part of magistrates ' courts was provided by a Home Office study ( Tarling and Weatheritt , 1979 ; but see also Hood , 1962 , 1972 ; Tarling et al. , 1995 ) of 30 large courts selected at random .
4 For its part , the Commons itself was representative of a limited electorate although there was no expectation that the electorate , should , or would , seek to impinge on the independence of members ' judgements .
5 On the question of counsels ' duties on hearing the judge make a slip in his summing up , see commentary on Holden [ 1991 ] Crim.L.R. at 480 .
6 Among the more important requirements are : the demonstration of management skills and financial viability ; commitment to equal opportunities policies ; the provision of full information to tenants and the Corporation ; an agreement to retain dwellings acquired as a Tenants ' Choice landlord for letting at rents within the reach of those in low-paid employment ; compliance with the terms of the Housing Corporation 's guidance on the management of Tenants ' Choice dwellings .
7 Compact should be a standing item on the agenda of governors ' meetings .
8 In the medium term the Kent Impact Study estimated that , on the basis of firms ' plans in late 1986 the Channel Tunnel would produce losses of 4,500 and 6,500 jobs in the ferry industry to be offset by gains of 3,200 jobs directly related to the operation of the Tunnel at Cheriton and Ashford , and 13,000 to 14,000 new jobs in other industries of which 3,700 were attributed to firms moving into Kent from other parts of the country .
9 Additional ‘ T ’ funding was allocated mainly on the basis of universities ' growth in undergraduate student numbers , as measured by their percentage of ‘ Fees-only ’ students .
10 The attainment bands were formed on the basis of pupils ' score on the GT4 test , not from the particular mathematics sets in which they do mathematics in their schools .
11 Both Italian writers commented particularly on the number of goldsmiths ' shops in the city ( 3 , pp.101–5 ; 25 , pp.51–2 ; 35 , pp.42–3 ) .
12 It is worth considering the French model since , with the introduction of the national core curriculum , there will be far less time in the school day to devote to non-specialist teaching ; and with the new terms and conditions for teachers there may well be many who will want a strict regulation on the number of hours ' work they will put in each day .
13 Loss of rent should be insured but there should be some upper limitation on the number of years ' cover .
14 In 1967 the Monopolies and Mergers Commission reported on the supply of solicitors ' ( and also barristers ' ) services in relation to restrictions on advertising .
15 Indeed , there is every argument for strengthening it by introducing penalties and allowing MMC findings on the outcomes of firms ' behaviour to form the basis for private actions for damages .
16 The second of the new areas covered provides guidance on the extent of auditors ' responsibilities in relation to an investment business 's compliance with those rules and regulations , for the conduct of investment business , which are not the subject of specific regular reporting by auditors .
17 No distinction is made on the grounds of students ' field of study , mode of study or status .
18 It will 1 ) examine more fully the extent to which primary schools vary in their effects on a variety of pupils ' educational outcomes , including progress in reading and maths ; 2 ) establish whether the composition of pupil intakes is related to effectiveness ; 3 ) find out whether school vary in their effectiveness from year to year and whether their effects on pupils persist into secondary school .
19 Finally it will be bundled with a Windows-based graphical client , something that Pick has long shied away from , but which it now accepts that is on a number of users ' ‘ tick-boxes ’ .
20 Employees may , for example , receive flat-rate payments , allowances based on a percentage of their salary , or a payment based on a number of weeks ' salary .
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