Example sentences of "[noun] that any [noun] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 There is no allegation that any part of the money paid by the investors for the Euramco shares was paid to or received by the solicitors .
2 When he was consecrated , however , Cranmer made a public protestation that any oath which he took acknowledging the authority of the Pope was not intended to be binding if it were against the law of God or the King 's prerogatives , nor would it bind him to be less free in reformation of the Church .
3 To grasp the overall picture of the weaponry and armour available to the knights and soldiers of Barbarossa 's armies , one must summarise the development of equipment during the period concerned , bearing in mind that any changes were not universal and immediate , and that arms and armour of both older and more recent styles would have happily co-existed .
4 When examining the mathematics curriculum we need to keep in mind that any curriculum consists of choices and selections from what is available , based on decisions made about what is valuable .
5 Thousands and thousands of tonnes of rock and gravel face us , and the thought pops into mind that any gold there may be in the area seems to be pretty safe from any chance of extracting it .
6 It should be borne in mind that any organisation such as the police or Department of Social Work will tend to react defensively to a formal complaint whereas good personal relations can often enable better results to be achieved .
7 Bear in mind that any speed limit is a maximum , it does not mean that it is safe to drive at that speed , always take into account all the conditions at the time , never drive so fast that you can not stop well within the distance you can see to be clear .
8 The draftsman should bear in mind that any restriction will be construed against the firm in whose interest it purports to be imposed .
9 It is worrying , therefore , that the NIRC in Hudson ( Birmingham ) Ltd v Winsper opined : ‘ If they [ the employers ] want to make it absolutely certain that no tribunal will dissent from their dismissing the driver who is convicted of dangerous driving , then they should , in fairness to themselves and the driver , post a notice or otherwise bring it to the attention of all their drivers that any conviction for dangerous driving , regardless of the circumstances which give rise to it , will lead to dismissal .
10 For completeness , the Report appended under the heading ‘ Project Appraisal ’ a questionnaire listing the considerations that any appraisal , whether of a proposed rescue , or conversion of an existing organisation to the co-operative form , or an entirely new start , would have to weigh .
11 As she had little dress sense , only a vague fear that any hat or dress she chose might be vulgar , so she had no sense of a possible style in which to decorate a house , or even a dining table , for Christmas .
12 By the end of 1916 , Allen was acknowledging from his prison cell that any propaganda effect of conscientious objection would occur , if at all , after the war .
13 Josie 's mood seemed okay , which suggested to Lucy that any problems that her presence may have caused must now have been smoothed over .
14 There is indeed no indication that any Jew ever worshipped a Greek god before Alexander .
15 According to this five-page document , sent from the US Embassy in Bonn to the FBI director on 23 October 1989 , ‘ From the information available from the Frankfurt airport records , there is no concrete indication that any piece of baggage was unloaded from Air Malta 180 , sent through the luggage routing system at Frankfurt airport and then loaded on board Pan Am 103 . ’
16 If a club has finished its league and cup programme , then it has also been practice that any ban imposed wo n't take effect until the start of next season , so as not to prevent the player taking part in close-season and pre-season tournaments .
17 It is good management practice that any change of policy should itself be assessed : the process should help to decide whether LMS can take the credit for any improvements that occur .
18 Mason includes a detailed description of route planning , chart marking and correction formulae that any PPL could use and find very useful .
19 Such notice shall contain a notice to the effect that any person who , being in occupation of the land but not named as a respondent , wishes to be heard , may apply at any stage of the proceedings to be joined as a respondent .
20 In view of the disadvantages of the husband having a fixed sum tied up in property at a time of depreciating money values , practitioners might be advised to consider including in the mortgage a provision to the effect that any capital sum received by the wife during the currency of the mortgage ( for example , by way of inheritance or pools win ) should be paid to the husband by way of reduction of the mortgage debt .
21 But most are worried about the effect that any delay would have on London 's European primacy as a financial centre .
22 They also warned against the cumulative effect that any US reforms might have on future profitability .
23 These sections provide in effect that any member of a local authority having any pecuniary interest direct or indirect in any contract , proposed contract or other matter must declare his interest .
24 9.18 Value Added Tax There will now most likely be a proviso contained in the lease to the effect that any sums specified in the lease are exclusive of VAT and that any obligation of the tenant in the lease to make any payment to the landlord shall include an obligation to pay in addition any VAT that may be chargeable .
25 The NEC decided that Militant did not satisfy the criterion that any group within the Labour Party must be open and free to any members .
26 By notice of appeal dated 22 April 1992 the father appealed on the grounds , inter alia , that ( 1 ) the judge was wrong in law to reject the submission that any consideration of the children 's welfare in the context of a judicial discretion under article 13 ( a ) of the Convention was relevant only as a material factor if it met the test of placing the children in an ‘ intolerable situation ’ under article 13 ( b ) ; ( 2 ) the judge should have limited considerations of welfare to the criteria for welfare laid down by the Convention itself ; ( 3 ) the judge was wrong in law to reject the submission that in the context of the exercise of the discretion permitted by article 13 ( a ) the court was limited to a consideration of the nature and quality of the father 's acquiescence ( as found by the Court of Appeal ) ; ( 4 ) in the premises , despite her acknowledgment that the exercise of her discretion had to be seen in the context of the Convention , the judge exercised a discretion based on a welfare test appropriate to wardship proceedings ; ( 5 ) the judge was further in error as a matter of law in not perceiving as the starting point for the exercise of her discretion the proposition that under the Convention the future of the children should be decided in the courts of the state from which they had been wrongfully removed ; ( 6 ) the judge , having found that on the ability to determine the issue between the parents there was little to choose between the Family Court of Australia and the High Court of England , was wrong not to conclude that as a consequence the mother had failed to displace the fundamental premise of the Convention that the future of the children should be decided in the courts of the country from which they had been wrongfully removed ; ( 7 ) the judge also misdirected herself when considering which court should decide the future of the children ( a ) by applying considerations more appropriate to the doctrine of forum conveniens and ( b ) by having regard to the likely outcome of the hearing in that court contrary to the principles set out in In re F. ( A Minor ) ( Abduction : Custody Rights ) [ 1991 ] Fam. 25 ; ( 8 ) in the alternative , if the judge was right to apply the forum conveniens approach , she failed to have regard to the following facts and matters : ( a ) that the parties were married in Australia ; ( b ) that the parties had spent the majority of their married life in Australia ; ( c ) that the children were born in Australia and were Australian citizens ; ( d ) that the children had spent the majority of their lives in Australia ; ( e ) the matters referred to in ground ( 9 ) ; ( 9 ) in any event on the facts the judge was wrong to find that there was little to choose between the Family Court of Australia and the High Court of England as fora for deciding the children 's future ; ( 11 ) the judge was wrong on the facts to find that there had been a change in the circumstances to which the mother would be returning in Australia given the findings made by Thorpe J. that ( a ) the former matrimonial home was to be sold ; ( b ) it would be unavailable for occupation by the mother and the children after 7 February 1992 ; and ( c ) there would be no financial support for the mother other than state benefits : matters which neither Thorpe J. nor the Court of Appeal found amounted to ‘ an intolerable situation . ’
27 What is needed is more detailed analysis , not only anthropological but philosophical , of the demands that any explanations of this sort would have to meet .
28 In 1965 I read about Penrose 's theorem that any body undergoing gravitational collapse must eventually form a singularity .
29 The improvement and refinement of classification at the Library of Congress are undertaken with the recognition that any change will affect the location of previously classified books .
30 These two States have undertaken by treaty to accept the obligations contained in another treaty to which they are third parties , in recognition that any attempt at a lasting settlement is unlikely to succeed without their co-operation .
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