Example sentences of "[art] prima [no cls] " in BNC.

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1 Newman explains that LET works with big practices of commercial architects because time and time again they come up with the goods , on budget , on time and with none of the tantrums of the prima donna .
2 He 'd take 60 's songs like , ‘ Donna , Donna The Prima Donna ’ and substitute their names .
3 On 17 November Leopold wrote ‘ The prima donna is infinitely pleased with her arias ’ .
4 At the point where in her first aria the prima donna expected from him an angry gesture , he exaggerated his anger so much that he looked as if he was about to box her ears and strike her on the nose with his fist .
5 Actually , a paean to half-hearted amateurishness , in which all but two members of the cast of A Midsummer Night 's Dream go missing on opening night , leaving the other parts to be taken by the stage manager , the company manager , a stagehand , and the prima donna 's boyfriend .
6 ‘ And I would n't stand for the prima donna behaviour of some of them , either .
7 The prima donna admired by the crowds in the marquee may give up outside in the rain — like the glamorous film star whose bikini must never be allowed to get wet !
8 The mullet was not fresh — " I guess it has not been scientifically embalmed , " said the Prima Donna .
9 So the prima facie plausible assumption that any creature able to perceive convexity would also be aware of connectedness is false .
10 The prima facie duties Ross recognizes include the duty to maximise good , and the usually more stringent duty to minimise bad or evil .
11 The prima facie conclusion to be drawn is that in the variable phonology of the ‘ underlying ’ ( East Midland/East Anglian ) speech community , loss of the fricative and merger of wight , white , or close approximation and overlap , had already taken place .
12 Moreover , the prima facie evidence for [ h ] -dropping continues well into EModE — long after there can be any suspicion of direct Anglo-Norman scribal interference .
13 On this basis , the prima facie view is that the defendant 's conviction should be quashed .
14 Held , that , since in Part III of the Insolvency Act 1986 there was no definition of ‘ company ’ in relation to administrative receivers , by virtue of section 251 of that Act the definition in section 735 of the Companies Act 1985 applied and , therefore , unless the contrary intention appeared , ‘ company ’ was to be defined as a company registered under the Companies Acts ; but that a contrary intention was to be deduced from the proper construction of the provisions relating to administrative receivers generally and the Act of 1986 as a whole , whereby it appeared that Parliament intended that ‘ company , ’ in the context of section 29(2) ( a ) , should not be confined to the prima facie meaning of companies registered under the Companies Acts but should embrace unregistered companies liable to be wound up under Part V of the Act of 1986 ; and that , accordingly , the applicants were administrative receivers within the meaning of section 29(2) ( post , pp. 243F–G , 244A–C , D–G , 245F — 246A ) .
15 An intention to displace the prima facie or primary meaning of the defined statutory term may appear in a number of ways .
16 also rejected the argument that surrounding circumstances qualified the prima facie meaning of the document .
17 Is there anything in the surrounding circumstances which would rebut the prima facie meaning of the agreement ?
18 I must now turn to the decided cases to see whether they refute the prima facie views I have formed and expressed in the foregoing paragraphs based on the construction of the statute and indeed otherwise to see what light they shed on the issues falling for decision .
19 1064 so to escape the prima facie claim to immunity which this class of documents ordinarily attracts .
20 If this is so , then the issue should be formulated as one of whether the existence of corporate power is sufficiently objectionable to defeat the prima facie justificatory force of a rights ' claim .
21 As the factories Act case illustrates , the courts sometimes Allow themselves to construe a statute in such a way as to produce a reasonable result , even though this involves departing from the prima facie meaning of the words .
22 Thus , in the actual case their Lordships held that although the Minister had to adduce evidence that the decision to ban national unions at G.C.H.Q. was based on considerations of national security , the question of whether such considerations outweighed the prima facie duty of fairness was for the Minister himself to decide .
23 As will have been apparent , the prima facie equality of shares can be modified by dividing the share capital into different classes with different rights as to dividends , capital or voting or with different nominal values .
24 Subsection 3 lays down the prima facie measure of damages .
25 It was held that the prima facie rule was displaced and the seller received as damages his loss of profit on one transaction .
26 Even when it is not displaced , the prima facie rule does not exclude any further loss which was reasonably foreseeable as a result of the buyer 's breach .
27 If the market price is higher , then the prima facie measure of damages is the extra , i.e. the difference between the contract price and the market price on the date of the seller 's breach .
28 explained the prima facie rule :
29 The prima facie rule would be displaced by a subsequent transaction which was not ‘ independent and disconnected , ’ as illustrated by the facts in Pagnan v. Corbisa .
30 In that case the seller 's damages would be reduced from the prima facie level in section 50 , British & Benningtons v. North West Cachar Tea Co. ( 1923 H.L. ) .
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