Example sentences of "[adv prt] in [noun] [no cls] " in BNC.

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1 Staffel , was seen to be shot down in 6G + GT by Hurricanes .
2 The submission was however inconsistent with the law as stated by this House in Reg. v. Governor of Pentonville Prison , Ex parte Sinclair [ 1991 ] 2 A.C. 64 , 81–92 , in which it was made clear in the speech of Lord Ackner ( with which the remainder of the Appellate Committee agreed ) that , under the provisions of the Extradition Act 1870 , the powers of the magistrate are specifically laid down in sections 3(1) , 8 , 9 and 10 of the Act ; and that in consequence , apart from consideration where appropriate whether the offence in question was an offence of a political character , the magistrate is not concerned with questions of foreign law at all , being concerned only with committal proceedings under English procedure in relation to an English crime or crimes specified in the Secretary of State 's order to proceed .
3 ( 5 ) Wherever , in ( 3 ) and ( 4 ) above , the order requires one or other court to consider whether it ought to try the case or whether it ought to transfer it ( pursuant to the powers of transfer under ss 40(2) , 41(1) or 42(2) of the 1984 Act ) that court must have regard to the criteria laid down in art 7(5) and set out at the start of Chapter 13 .
4 Yet , said Mr. Watkinson , Lord Bridge can hardly have had it in mind that the private law right which he plainly regarded as coming into existence when the duty laid down in section 65(2) arose could give rise to a public law duty as to the manner in which the private law right was to be satisfied .
5 This rather limited list of excuses , laid down in section 39(2) of the 1944 Act , must be regarded as exhaustive .
6 The rule laid down in article 6(1) therefore applies where the actions brought against the various defendants are related when the proceedings are instituted , that is to say where it is expedient to hear and determine them together in order to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings .
7 The second is that one applies the conflict rule laid down in article 7(3) itself on the assumption that its conditions have been satisfied .
8 The court reached that conclusion after holding that the quota system established by Council Regulation ( E.E.C. ) No. 170/83 constituted a derogation from the general rule of equal conditions of access to fishery resources laid down in article 2(1) of Regulation ( E.E.C. ) No. 101/76 : see paragraph 24 of the judgment , at pp. 221–222 .
9 Over in Gioia del Colle , a child had been born with a lucky mole , said another .
10 Mr Michael ‘ Whackson ’ Jackson surprised observers of the pop scene when he stopped off in London en route from his coronation as an African tribal king ( see ‘ A Bit of a Git ’ ) .
11 Even allowing for the obligatory cock up in defence = goal .
12 Up in Carlisle er s
13 This one comes from Perrybar up in Birmingham erm coming to form now , so that 's the fourth and final leg of our Radio Oxford yankee .
14 Longman the least seasonally biased of the three struggled to break even in the first half and this removed the normal pattern of Longman 's half-year profits helping to offset the first half losses of the other two businesses but before we get too depressed er I point out that Addison Wesley s sales were up by eleven percent and the size of the first half loss reflects the company 's decision to gear up in advance er , for what we w believe will be a very strong er , second er , half performance .
15 Buy it by pound , yes , they wrapped it up in paper wr in greaseproof paper yes they 'd pat it into
16 Now he 's on the editorial and Billy , my eldest brother he er was he came up in Glasgow er getting the Scottish Express .
17 Apparently Bristol Technology Inc 's Xprinter software library , its common graphics programming interface for both X Windows displays and Postscript and PCL laser printers , is going to turn up in Unix SVR4.2 soon .
18 Erm following discussion at the Airport Policy panel , erm we submitted the whole weeks which you will see we set out in appendix er one of the report .
19 where they 're putting forward a recommendation for a number of minor and major building projects within the capital guidelines and those are set out in appendix er appendices five and six .
20 It was having the same sorts of mainly damaging effects on people 's personal lives and on their family lives and so on , and in research that I carried out in Brighton erm over the past three or four years we were looking at these effects — how they were affecting unemployed people in Brighton — and trying to explain them .
21 The extent and nature of the duty owed to lawful visitors are set out in s. 2(1) and s. 2(2) OLA 1957 .
22 The duty set out in s. 2(1) OLA 1957 applies ‘ except insofar as he ( the occupier ) is free to and does extend , restrict , modify or exclude his duty to any visitor or visitors by agreement or otherwise ’ .
23 It must however be emphasized that these powers can not be used by a solicitors ' incorporated practice to do anything in breach of the Solicitors Act 1974 , the Rules or any rules , principles or requirements of conduct applicable to incorporated practices — in this regard attention is drawn to the proviso set out in Clause 3(a) .
24 It must however be emphasised that these powers can not be used by a solicitors ' incorporated practice to do anything in breach of the Solicitors Act 1974 , the Rules or any rules , principles or requirements of conduct applicable to incorporated practices — in this regard attention is drawn to the proviso set out in Clause 3(a) .
25 The authorisation of building societies by the Building Societies Commission so that they can raise money and accept deposits depends in part on a society 's having directors , a chief executive and a secretary who are willing and able to direct the society 's affairs in accordance with the criteria of ‘ prudent management ’ which are set out in s 45(3) of the Building Societies Act 1986 .
26 Yet it had also already proven to be a powerful and flexible tool for tackling complex system building tasks as set out in Bobrow et al ( 1977 ) .
27 Such a judicial interference is unacceptable unless it falls within the exceptions set out in article 10(2) , which are to be narrowly interpreted and the necessity for any restrictions convincingly established .
28 If a non-competition covenant appears likely to infringe Article 85(1) exemption is possible under Article 85(3) although such an exemption is unlikely to be granted in respect of restrictive covenants because of the difficulty of showing that such provisions fulfil the four requirements set out in Article 85(3) that must be satisfied if an exemption is to be available .
29 As far as fishing vessels are concerned , the principle is , moreover , expressly set out in article 2(1) of Council Regulation ( E.E.C. ) No. 101/76 of 19 January 1976 laying down a common structural policy for the fishing industry ( Official Journal 1976 No .
30 Treaty , including the principle of non-discrimination set out in article 40(3) , the Commission considered that , contrary to the statements in paragraph 26 of the order of 10 October 1989 in Commission of the European Communities v. United Kingdom ( Case 246/89 R ) [ 1989 ] E.C.R. 3125 , 3132–3133 , the present quota system , while limiting access to certain fishery resources , did not affect the principle of equal access to those limited resources for the fishermen of all member states .
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