Example sentences of "in [noun] that [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 As regards the requirements referred to in part ( b ) of the national court 's question ( 2 ) as I reformulated it above , it may be noted in limine that the mere fact that fishing activity is carried out , on a self-employed basis , using a fishing vessel registered in a member state does not mean that there is establishment in that state .
2 Dr V. Hasanali of the Soviet Institute of Climatology and Medicine , has stated in a paper published in Moscow that the vital activities of humans are affected not by individual factors but by the sum total of certain external factors .
3 A warning was issued by the National Rivers Authority in Shrewsbury that the swollen River Severn was expected to burst its banks overnight for the second time in a week .
4 The theory of Greek drama is intended to provide the guidelines for such a theatre , for there is an idea prevalent in Germany that a special affinity links German thought of the period with classical Greek thought .
5 It is submitted in response that the gradual movement of social history is towards such a position of recognition and facilitation , and that this position should indeed be adopted .
6 1.62 As we have seen , when the defendant pays into court after making an interim payment , he must ensure that this notice of payment in states that the interim payment has been taken into account ( Ord 29 , r15 ) if he wants to put the plaintiff on risk for the aggregate of the two payments .
7 Those words , just quoted , were written at the end of March , not from Basle , but from Lugano , and it was in Lugano that the new plans for the book had been translated into this continuous draft .
8 It was alleged in March that the Soviet Union had attempted to circumvent the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces ( INF ) Treaty .
9 At the same time Sir David Maxwell Fyfe persistently refused the requests of Sir Robert Boothby in Parliament that a Royal Commission should be set up to enquire into the nature and treatment of homosexuality .
10 It is sometimes suggested in addition that the bare infinitive is a sort of grammatical fossil which is only found in petrified form in certain fixed constructions ( Curme 1931 : 456 ) .
11 There is just enough flexibility to arrange that at P and in addition that the first derivatives of the metric components vanish .
12 They had conceded that the project could go ahead , but very few bets were being taken in Whitehall that the century-old logjam would be shifted .
13 Both Vietnamese and Chinese diplomats confirmed in mid-September that a secret summit meeting had taken place on Sept. 3-4 .
14 The petitioner pleaded in reply that no binding compromise had been reached and asserted , in the alternative that the compromise agreement had been cancelled by the failure on the part of the respondents to pay the sums due to be paid thereunder .
15 He may recall that in Germany more than 3 million people are unemployed and he may bear it in mind that a higher proportion of people are in work in this country than in Germany or in any other European country except Denmark .
16 However a surface likely to be recontaminated between use needs to be disinfected immediately before use bearing in mind that a higher concentration may be necessary to compensate for a reduced contact time or reduced time in a dry state .
17 When you bear in mind that a 256 colour image at 1024 by 768 pixels is 768K in size then it is not surprising that ordinary monitor controller cards simply can not redraw the screen image with any speed .
18 As these factors are examined it is important to bear in mind that a major advantage to the builder is that the financial risks of employing labour direct are transferred to the sub-contractor .
19 The peer panels and the council would do well to consider this fact , and to keep in mind that a rejected grant is not a denial of artistic freedom , but an eventuality of government-sponsored art .
20 You should bear in mind that a full-grown Severum can measure 8″ or more , so your tank will not be large enough for two in the long term .
21 It must be borne in mind that a longer exposure will allow more plant material to be ‘ seen ’ but correction must be made for spreading of material seen at a lower exposure .
22 It was with this in mind that a unanimous Parliament supported not a conspiracy of Tory landowners , but Attlee 's postwar Labour Government in passing the 1947 Agriculture Act , which laid the foundations for the great agricultural revolution of our times .
23 The explanation for this is partly cultural — the legendary loyalty of the Japanese employees ( and bearing in mind that an estimated 75% of misuse in the West is carried out by insiders ) ; and partly technical — the current predominance of internal networks .
24 Vitamin deficiency Vitamin deficiency can only be properly diagnosed and treated by a doctor , but there are certain fairly obvious signs which should be noted , bearing in mind that an old person who is obese can still be suffering from malnutrition and vitamin deficiency through eating the wrong kinds of food .
25 Bearing in mind that the elderly relative would need a stairlift , Judy arranged for the flat to be fitted with a safe Stannah Stairlift that 's equipped with a simple push-button control in the armrest .
26 It is necessary to bear it in mind that the vast majority of occupational pensions schemes operate successfully in the United Kingdom — some 100,000 of them .
27 While welcoming the briefing that is continually taking place , may I press the Secretary of State to bear in mind that the reserve forces are always an important aspect of our national forces ?
28 It is also helpful to bear in mind that the following factors tend to be of little or no relevance in determining whether a business is transferred as a going concern .
29 This it has to be said , reflects a rather poor month last year but bearing in mind that the 1991 figures showed a 48 per cent rise in income , the current situation is viewed with satisfaction by all concerned .
30 I 'd like to ask Jack Steer why does the Labour Party want to return grant maintained schools to Council control , bearing in mind that the Labour Party say they 're going to abolish County Councils , so who will erm these schools be returned to ?
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