Example sentences of "[noun] [vb mod] know [prep] " in BNC.

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1 An atavism is a throwback , a ‘ primitive ’ reaction ( it literally means ‘ great-grandfather 's grandfather ’ ) — something the writer must know about in himself if his work is to resonate in his readers .
2 Erm it 's one of life 's conundrums , there are of course answers which solicitors should know about .
3 ( I miss out the word puking from this Shakespearean phrase since I know of few instances in which a baby has strained the cassock of the clergyman baptising it , though doubtless readers may know of one . )
4 Ask a practitioner more about it — sounds like something anyone who pulls on a pair of trainers should know about !
5 Yet it remained critically important that every potential litigant should know in what court , and in what manner , his pleas might be heard .
6 That a single volume is no longer sufficient to cover every thing an undergraduate should know about igneous rocks merely means that Daniel Barker 's book will never completely replace others concentrating on more particular aspects of the subject .
7 But soon the big stories were written in the knowledge that readers would know at least the bare bones from a news bulletin , and the 24-hour cycle of the daily paper lost much of its point as a news medium .
8 Buffalo will know in the next couple of days whether Kelly will be fit to face Houston again in the first round of the play-offs next weekend .
9 Mr Bill Nicol , whom many readers will know as a former Chairman of SCOTVEC , chairs the new Committee .
10 Regular readers will know of our past adventures with food .
11 Old people 's homes will know of plans to move elderly people from their own or relatives ' homes into local authority or private care .
12 WHAT EVERY PARENT SHOULD KNOW ABOUT DRUGS
13 But Alan would know about it , would n't he ? ’
14 Once they talked of it in the village shop , the whole village would know by nightfall .
15 Every hunt in England shall know of … ’
16 Many readers who know nothing else about Piaget 's work will know of his experiments on ‘ conservation ’ .
17 READERS of the August issue will know of the dream of Lotsi Jacobyini to establish a community for handicapped people in the village of Atea in Romania .
18 If they are wrong central management will know within days ( Smith 1988 : 143 ) .
19 A character with Metallurgy will know of the adulteration , one with Numismatics will know the coins are worth less than face value .
20 Anyone with Daemon Lore , Rune Lore or Theology will know at once that this room is used for Daemon summoning .
21 However , serious disorientation with loss of control resulting in an accident , can and does occur and all pilots should know about this problem and how to deal with it .
22 Customs must know of this planning point .
23 I would like to share with you a burden for prayer as I feel it is only right that all Christians should know about anything that would deny us total freedom .
24 I think it important that a regulatory body should know with precision from whom ( if anyone ) they have to invite or receive representations without first having to form an impugnable judgment as to who those persons are .
25 By a notice of appeal dated 13 August 1991 the applicant appealed against that decision of the Divisional Court on the grounds , inter alia , that it had erred ( 1 ) in holding that there was no obligation on Lautro to give the applicant an opportunity to make representations prior to the issue of that notice ; ( 2 ) in asserting that there was a principle of law that a regulatory body should know with precision from whom they must invite representations ; ( 3 ) in perceiving any difficulty in identifying persons who should have been given advance notification , so as to be treated fairly , of any proposals by Lautro to issue a notice since such notification should at least be given to anyone who would be directly affected by such a notice and/or whose conduct was in issue ; ( 4 ) in regarding as apposite the remarks of Lord Diplock in Cheall v. Association of Professional Executive Clerical and Computer Staff [ 1983 ] 2 A.C. 180 , 190A since the non-application of the legal concept of natural justice to all persons effected by but not parties to a dispute was not and had never been in issue ; and ( 5 ) in failing to have regard to the absence of any rights of appeal according to the rules of Lautro in deciding whether the principle of natural justice applied .
26 I think it important that a regulatory body should know with precision from whom ( if anyone ) they have to invite or receive representations without first having to form an impugnable judgment as to who those persons are .
27 He is n't a cousin or any relation but we thought somebody in the town must know of him or where he went . ’
28 Anyone seeing her in your dressing-room would know at once .
29 The Heath Government appointed a Select Committee on the Corporation Tax and the subsequent Labour Government appointed one on a wealth tax , but both refused a permanent subcommittee on taxation so that there is still no mechanism by which the House of Commons can know about or participate in investigations of taxation problems or possible developments in policy .
30 This more general knowledge concerns both what the speaker or listener may know about the discourse topic , and what he/she knows about conventions which are normally followed in speaking and writing .
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