Example sentences of "[conj] in [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 In that look she saw her life with him and it was a decent life : the small farm in high northern fell-land , the farm coming in part or in whole to him , several children , heavy days , quiet times , a life she often yearned for — a plain and ordinary life away from this coddled valley , a place in which she could start again .
2 For example , the activity might be the teacher in exposition to the whole class ( E ) , or in exposition to a group of 10 pupils ( E10 ) .
3 It was for the Roman to decide whether he would speak in Latin or in Greek to a Greek public — that is , with or without interpreter — and Aemilius Paulus could skilfully pass from one language to the other ( Liv .
4 It simply acts as an empty subject which allows a certain element such as the book or in China to be placed near the beginning of the clause and to be interpreted as its theme , that is , what the message is about .
5 He had been working on it ever since the end of the war , and showing it in whole or in part to his friends .
6 The legislation renders liable to forfeiture any benefit derived from the publication of material concerning the circumstances of the offence , from the publication of material concerning the defendant 's opinions , exploits or life history ( provided that the benefit was attributable in whole or in part to notoriety achieved through commission of the offence ) or any benefit obtained by commercial exploitation in any other way of notoriety achieved through commission of the offence . )
7 In many of the reported United States of America cases in which offenders sold or assigned their rights , the proceeds were applied in whole or in part to the payment of legal fees .
8 We can not forbid individuals to use that allowance in whole or in part to pay fees for their care .
9 The Information will be used by you solely for the purpose of evaluating the possible purchase by you of the Company and , unless and until you have completed such a transaction , the Information will be kept confidential by you and will not be disclosed , in whole or in part to any other person , except that the Information or portions thereof may be disclosed to those of your directors , officers , employees , agents , auditors , lawyers , bankers and professional advisers ( collectively ‘ Representatives ’ ) who need to know such information for the purpose of evaluating the prospective acquisition ( it being understood that those Representatives will be informed of the confidential nature of the Information and shall agree to be bound by this Agreement and , if requested by ourselves , will enter into a direct agreement with us on the same terms as this Agreement ) .
10 Support dipped sharply to 51 per cent only when the Americans were held to be largely or in part to blame for the failure of the Paris Summit in May 1960 .
11 Tenants may require assistance in negotiations with landlords or in approaches to housing officials .
12 Further , he might by the same instrument grant a present estate , say for life , to A , followed by an estate for life or in tail to B , and , if he wished , as many further particular estates ( for life or in tail ) to other persons successively as he pleased , ending up , if he thought fit , with an estate in fee simple to some person named .
13 As has been discussed , the ‘ response to injury ’ hypothesis depends on initial endothelial injury and little is known about loss of endothelium in vivo either spontaneously or in response to risk factors for atherosclerosis .
14 or in response to national/LEA requirements and governor or parent initiatives .
15 There is no a priori assumption that the state ( whether local or national ) acts either as an agent of capital or in response to pressures from other classes .
16 However , even in this basic assumption , all had to acknowledge a problem : not all crime is committed by such people ; a proportion has to be attributed to ‘ ordinary ’ people acting on a casual or occasional basis , or in response to extraordinary circumstances .
17 Ideally the conflicts are thus best resolved by non-negotiated partisan action taken by one agency in anticipation of , or in response to , the actions of another .
18 So , too , were a number of producer co-operatives by workpeople determined to set up in business themselves whether , by competing with master manufacturers , to reinforce the effect of a strike ; or to counter a lock-out ; or in response to wage-cuts ; or simply to create jobs .
19 The effect is to bring ‘ Ministers into the management structure of the Department ’ ( Whitbread , 1987 , p. 95 ) , providing ‘ a comprehensive grasp of the activities of the Department , with information-presented in a much more systematic way than was normally available through briefing by officials on particular issues or in response to particular requests ’ ( Likierman , 1982 , p. 130 ) .
20 A republic might secede subject to a referendum called by the republic 's Supreme Soviet either on its own initiative or in response to a petition signed by at least 10 per cent of USSR citizens permanently resident in that republic .
21 His proposed referendum law , which would have given the president the right to call a referendum either on his own initiative or in response to a significant demand from voters in both Czech and Slovak republics , was also defeated .
22 It was natural , however , that the CNAA 's discussions — ; as distinct from its day-to-day validation activities — should focus , in the first half of the 1970s , on the most substantial new developments — either initiated by the CNAA or in response to initiatives elsewhere .
23 Some neoplasms of the reticuloendothelial system , including lymphoma and Castleman 's disease , may also be associated with high CRP values reflecting cytokine release either from neoplastic tissue or in response to the presence of neoplasia .
24 This adds a further regulator to receptor-matrix interaction and implies that specific receptor expression may be influenced by nuclear events or in response to a change in matrix .
25 The rats have to turn in a certain direction in a T-maze in order not to be electrically shocked or in order to be fed .
26 You will have to wear an identifying red or white belt either in place of your normal grade belt or in addition to it .
27 ‘ ( 2 ) The Company may , in accordance with section 251 of the Act and any regulations made under it , send a summary financial statement to any member instead of or in addition to the documents referred to in paragraph ( 1 ) above ; and where it does so , the statement shall be delivered or sent by post to the member not less than twenty-one clear days before the annual general meeting before which those documents are to be laid . ’
28 Patients requiring tetanus immunisations only , or in addition to the above
29 The 1987 Language Survey conducted by ILEA found 23 per cent of the Authority 's school population using a language other than or in addition to English at home , with 170 different languages spoken by its pupils .
30 Alternatively , or in addition to this , wives may be given help in re-entering employment when the couple return to Britain on completing their assignment .
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