Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] ['s] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And their strange adaptations , such as the finches ' beaks , must be a response to the new and strange environment in which they found themselves .
2 On the contemnors ' appeals : —
3 Thanks to him and the rest who are behind these outrageous accusations , the Pakistanis ' reputations will probably be in tatters. —
4 This fantasy is compounded in ads for sports shoes by Nike or Reebok , in which the superstars ' looks are almost as spectacular as their talent .
5 And if the scientists felt that they could speak with certainty , how much more so the lesser publicists and ideologists who were all the more certain of the experts ' certainties , because they could understand most of what the experts said , at least in so far as it could still be said without the use of higher mathematics .
6 When the defendant has served his comments , the schedule should be lodged with the court , so that the trial judge can , before the hearing starts , get a clear picture of which of the issues raised in the case are agreed and which disputed and why from the pleadings , the experts ' reports and the schedule .
7 There were elements in its thinking , however , which were akin to the Keynesians ' views .
8 Over succeeding years , the seafarers ' unions of several countries managed to secure improved conditions for work in the area .
9 The labourers ' houses disappear also .
10 You ca n't imagine him going into one of the labourers ' cottages can you , Thérèse said , pulling on her nylons .
11 Already the labourers ' wives were returning from the village , long loaves tucked under their arms .
12 Of schooling in the East Riding in the 1790s , it was later recalled : When the labourers ' children could obtain employment from the farmers , the school was abandoned , and the youthful pupils were sent to cut weeds in the cornfields in the spring ; to frighten away the birds from the standing corn ; then to assist in harvest operations ; and next to glean the fields which had been reaped .
13 While the seamen 's leaders freely admitted that a national union was the right thing , they also declared that it could not be done .
14 A Captain Beechey , sent by the newly established Marine Department of the Board of Trade to discuss their grievances and explain the Act had some difficulty in convincing his audience that Shipping Officers were intended to be the seamen 's friends , and that the Register Ticket , far from being a " badge of slavery " , gave them advantages .
15 In the words of others he springs into action as a political firebrand , marching into the coal-owners ' offices and demanding justice for their exploited work-force , only to be told that the coal seams were too meagre and the profit margin too small to provide improvements in safety standards .
16 It incorporates consolidated texts of the Solicitors ' Accounts Rules 1991 and the Accountants ' Report Rules 1991 , together with changes made to the Rules in April 1992 .
17 Recent changes to the Solicitors ' Accounts Rules ( 1991 ) ( SAR ) and the Accountants ' Report Rules 1991 ( ARR ) will affect the way reporting accountants carry out their duties .
18 The Solicitors ' Accounts Rules 1991 and the Accountant 's Report Rules 1991 apply to MNPs ' offices in England and Wales .
19 The books of such company must be available for production to the Council on demand under its powers of inspection contained in the Solicitors ' Accounts Rules 1986 .
20 The Solicitors ' Accounts Rules 1991 and the Accountant 's Report Rules 1991 are reviewed in Chapter 12 .
21 Some system might be adopted ( Clause 13.06 ) for coordinating applications for new certificates ; ( 2 ) to maintain bank accounts in accordance with the Solicitors ' Accounts Rules and to provide for restrictions on drawings from such accounts ( Clauses 6.0.4 and 6.0.6 ) .
22 Solicitors are allowed to form service companies , subject to the following conditions : ( 1 ) membership of the company must be limited to members or partners of the firm , admitted solicitors holding practising certificates , retired partners of the firm and dependants of retired or deceased partners ; ( 2 ) the books of the company must be made available where the Council of the Law Society require an inspection of the accounts under the Solicitors ' Accounts Rules 1991 .
23 Where that does not resolve any difficulty , the client may pursue his claims with the Solicitors ' Complaints Bureau .
24 Finally , the client should be told that if all else fails , the Solicitors ' Complaints Bureau exists to deal with complaints about the conduct of solicitors .
25 As an additional safeguard , you may refer your concerns to the Solicitors ' Complaints Bureau , whose details can be obtained from us .
26 There was a further meeting yesterday — at the solicitors ' offices — at which he was not present .
27 The arguments about the location , availability , approachability and cost of the solicitors ' offices emerge again in this context .
28 The presence of mains services and their location will generally arise from the solicitors ' enquiries and searches , but their significance on layout can be underestimated .
29 The occupational structure of the town can be deduced from the freemen 's registers , for between 1559 and 1603 an average of about twenty men per annum , almost 900 in all , were admitted to the freedom of the city .
30 The early history of the inhabitants of the Row can be pieced together in a limited fashion from leases and from entries in the freemen 's registers .
  Next page