Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [vb pp] by " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 I will not second-guess the judgments made by Merseyside TEC in respect of any provider , including Hexagon .
2 Respondents usually hold a very clear understanding of the judgments indicated by the verbal labels as , for example , in the ‘ warm-clinical ’ construct previously mentioned .
3 A " customer " is a person with or for whom a firm carries on , or merely intends to carry on , " regulated business " or other business carried on in connection with that regulated business ; the reference to " other business " does not make someone a customer if he would not otherwise be but seems merely to extend the scope of the activities covered by the COB Rules .
4 So the idea of the student as an embryonic researcher turns out to be a metaphor referring , at its best , to just some of the activities employed by the student .
5 Many of the activities undertaken by the partnership can be provided by a school without using this form of organisation .
6 The proportion allocated , it says , reflects an assessment of the activities undertaken by the manager in pursuit of the company 's investment objectives .
7 The time ranged from half an hour a day to 13 hours a day , depending on whether devolution was viewed as a separate activity concerned only with finance or whether it was seen as being curriculum driven and/or inseparable from all the activities performed by a head in a working day .
8 To this end they repeatedly urged the government to return fugitives to their cities , and to abolish the immunities enjoyed by church and noble land in and around the cities .
9 But the whole drift of events was towards a widening and consolidation of the immunities claimed by diplomats in the performance of their duties .
10 One of the defences possessed by the manufacturer against the retailer determining the nature of supply is the accurate positioning of products and brands , derived from effective market research , against target market segments known to be an important constituent of the retailer 's customer profile .
11 Although the attack on the forms of classic nineteenth-century fiction was pursued in the interests of modernity , it is evident from the defences provided by the nouveaux romanciers that they were in fact relying to a considerable extent on a revised concept of realism .
12 It also follows that the defences provided by s.94(4) and s.94(5) and s.95 of that Act will still be available to the defendant .
13 Whatever the process , it could well be that the crustal shortening in the continents produced by the early phases of the Hercynian orogeny , with its resultant lowering of sea-levels , produced the widespread regression of late Carboniferous times , when coal measure swamps spread from Texas to the Donetz .
14 One of the forms assumed by OSIRIS , the Egyptian god of creation who was exiled to the Underworld by HORUS the falcon .
15 On the other hand he suggested that no proof had been brought forward that the forms proposed by the Puritans were founded on any ordinance of Christ .
16 The forms depicted by Nijinska are far from meaningless .
17 Armed with computers , the procurement department did its job much faster , reports Larry Skinner , the company 's chief of re-engineering , but it actually took longer for anyone in TI to purchase supplies because filling out all the forms demanded by the procurement department had become so complicated .
18 Just as Sgt Wilson 's thesis was channelled to me because I was known to be interested in research , so many police research departments now get allocated the task of reading the essays submitted by sergeants and inspectors for NEBS or DMS qualifications .
19 Some want a revolution as thorough as the one that has changed the exams taken by British 16-year-olds .
20 Sections 6 and 7 of the UCTA override these provisions , and , in effect , provide for mandatory inclusion of such warranties in the contracts covered by these sections , since the easiest way to exclude liability for breach of such warranties is to exclude them altogether from the terms of the contract .
21 The contracts covered by SGSA , s 2 are thus in practice contracts of exchange or barter , and contracts for the supply of labour and goods or materials ( eg building contracts ) .
22 in addition to the contracts placed by Health Authorities , others will come from those general practitioners who opt to manage their own budget .
23 In addition to the regulation of exemption clauses , the UCTA also makes some alterations to the general law of contract in relation to the contracts affected by it , and regulates the exclusion of tortious liability , in business situations , for death , personal injury or other damage caused by negligence .
24 You also state : ‘ In the year to March 1992 , Japanese firms won 31% of the contracts financed by their country 's aid . ’
25 Whilst the sale itself can be effected only by acte notarie , it is worth remembering that many of the contracts drawn by sellers ' Agents are prepared without a sight of the title deeds .
26 The fourth element that the plaintiff has to prove is that the acts done by her were done in reliance on or as a result of her belief that she would become entitled to the deceased 's property on his death …
27 ‘ All costs charges and expenses incurred hereunder by the bank or by the receiver in perfecting or otherwise in connection with this security or in respect of the property hereby charged including ( without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing ) all costs of all proceedings for the enforcement of the security hereby constituted or for obtaining payment of the moneys hereby secured or arising out of or in connection with the acts authorised by clause 7 hereof ( whether or not such costs charges and expenses and moneys or part thereof would be allowable on a party and party or solicitor and own client taxation by this court ) shall be recoverable from the companies as a debt … and shall be charged on the premises comprised herein …
28 The Acts passed by Labour Governments , the Wheatley Act ( 1924 ) and the Greenwood Act ( 1930 ) to assist local authorities , were both used very extensively by subsequent Conservative and National Governments .
29 For example , the acts restricted by copyright may form a substantial part of the licence 's subject-matter .
30 British hydrologist Ted Hollis , of University College London — one of the experts proposed by the Ramsar Bureau for the new study — says the amount of water flowing in the river is 40 per cent less than the Greek government claims and that the volume reaching the irrigated areas will be consequently reduced .
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