Example sentences of "of [noun] [verb] [prep] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 A spokesman for the Swiss Justice Ministry insisted , however , that " criminal proceedings have to be conducted and the accused will have to be granted all the rights of defence provided for by the ( Swiss ) federal constitution and the European Human Rights Convention " .
2 • A wide range of subjects and authors , with a choice of hundreds of titles to choose from throughout the year .
3 But with shelves and shelves of titles to choose from in the shops , where do you start ?
4 That evening we looked back on the day with our fellow guests whose interests — from birdwatching to archaeology , cave-exploring to gliding — reflected the enormous variety of activities catered for across the region .
5 That evening we looked back on the day with our fellow guests whose interests — from birdwatching to archaeology , cave-exploring to gliding — reflected the enormous variety of activities catered for across the region .
6 A provider , being judged on the length of waiting lists , will simply accept for treatment the number of cases provided for in the contract , quite properly refusing further cases unless reimbursed on a cost-per-case basis .
7 Further , the cases in question will be compared with a wide sample of cases disposed of under the 1964 Act .
8 Some of the information provided to you will also be contained in the minutes of meetings referred to in the following paragraph .
9 A series of whoops came from round the pit , followed by a shout and a gabble of voices .
10 In the standard experiments the effect of arousal is to change the range of cues attended to by the subject , high arousal conditions thus show best memory for central information while in low arousal conditions subjects remember peripheral information best .
11 Thus s7(4) permits the court to take into account any statement in a welfare report or evidence given in respect of matters referred to in the report provided they are relevant to the question in hand .
12 The section retains the types of licences provided for by the 1959 and 1962 Acts , and introduces two new types recommended by Clayson ( paras .
13 As he reclined in his sofa , surrounded by a treasure trove of knick-knacks collected from around the world , Mark said he had always had a taste for travel .
14 In such discourses , what can be specified about the sender is often justifiably taken for granted , because the student has experience of these discourse types in his or her own language : in the modern world we are unlikely to come across a student who does not have some idea of the nature of news or fiction , and the sort of relationship entered into with the senders .
15 ‘ The case may be said to be a good example of the stringency with which the courts scrutinise transactions of guarantee entered into at the instance of a debtor who is likely to be in a position to exert influence on the surety and in circumstances in which the surety can derive no conceivable benefit from the transaction .
16 Compare this to the strenuously managed , balanced sense of self arrived at by the likes of The Eurythmics and Howard Jones .
17 In the Torfaen judgment the Court ruled , in relation to similar national legislation prohibiting the opening of retail shops on Sundays , that such a prohibition was not compatible with the principle of the free movement of goods provided for in the Treaty unless any obstacles to Community trade thereby created did not exceed what was necessary in order to ensure the attainment of the objective in view and unless that objective was justified with regard to Community law .
18 ‘ provided that … the rights of non-member countries are not involved , a member state can not rely on the provisions of a pre-existing convention of that kind in order to justify restrictions on the marketing of products coming from another member state where the marketing thereof is lawful by virtue of the free movement of goods provided for by the Treaty .
19 Is the kingdom of God spoken of in the New Testament simply ‘ the moral organisation of the human race ’ , or does that conception owe more than the Liberals themselves realised to their own enlightened and optimistic view of the development of Protestant culture in their own day ?
20 Throughout the 1980s , it battled to achieve two crucial , strategic shifts : to reduce its dependence on bulk , low-margin , commodity chemicals which tend to swing wildly with the economic cycle — in favour of high value-added , high-margin ‘ effect ’ chemicals ; and to cut the share of sales accounted for by the UK .
21 Scroungerphobia was monitored by two researchers , Peter Golding and Sue Middleton , who reproduced in New Society one of the Daily Mail 's diatribes against " Scroungers by the Sea " in 1977 : " The seaside social security offices are thick with subsidised cigarette smoke , the smell of alcohol paid for by the state and the smugly tanned faces of leeches feeding off the hard-working , ordinary , silent majority . "
22 However , there are a number of situations provided for in the Directive where the supervisory authority of the member state in question may allow for an exception to a compulsory bid .
23 He was startled to see a column of smoke rising from among the trees .
24 Section 31 explains the rights of an assignee of share in partnership : ( 1 ) An assignment by a partner of his share in the partnership , either absolute or by way of mortage or redeemable charge , does not , as against the other partners , entitle the assignee , during the continuance of the partnership , to interfere in the management or administration of the partnership business or affairs , or to require any accounts of the partnership transactions , or to inspect the partnership books , but entitles the assignee only to receive the share of profits to which the assigning partner would otherwise be entitled , and the assignee must accept the account of profits agreed to by the partners .
25 Nuadu thought that a glitter of amusement showed from within the folds of the hood .
26 In some respects , this change ( which is part of the " deregulation " of television provided for in the 1990 Broadcasting Act ) will be welcome : no longer will television companies be obliged to submit their controversial programmes to an outside body for preview and pre-censorship .
27 Thus whereas the bare infinitive allows for the incidence of its event to a support situated within the confines of event time , the mechanism of incidence provided for by the verb form itself is inoperative when called upon express an incidence to a support situated prior to the time contained in the event .
28 The main owner of such schools is usually and indirectly the Church of Ireland , and current expenditure and salaries are provided by the state , with the board of governors presided over by the local minister .
29 I was about to tell my master when we heard the sounds of music coming from beyond the wall of St Paul 's .
30 If you want a lengthier walk there are plenty of routes to choose from in the forest .
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