Example sentences of "[det] [noun] as a " in BNC.

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1 By a notice of appeal dated 12 December 1990 the plaintiffs appealed on the grounds , inter alia , ( 1 ) that the judge erred in law in holding that the first defendant was entitled to add to any security , all the costs charges and expenses , however unreasonable they were ; ( 2 ) the judge failed to follow the decision in In re Adelphi Hotel ( Brighton ) Ltd. [ 1953 ] 1 W.L.R. 955 ; ( 3 ) the judge erred in law in construing the charging covenants of the legal mortgage which were all in similar terms that all costs charges and expenses howsoever incurred by the first defendant or any receiver under or in relation to the mortgage or such indebtedness or liabilities on a full indemnity basis as allowing the first defendant to charge as it pleased however unreasonable such a charge might be ; and ( 4 ) the judge erred in law in not construing that provision as a provision providing for taxation or computation on an indemnity basis of the first defendant 's costs , charges and expenses .
2 ‘ The plan is to use that money as a launching pad for further funds that could eventually result in major building work , ’ he said .
3 A new report claims that twelve people die each hour as a result of smoking , at a cost to hospitals of four hundred and thirty-seven million pounds .
4 She had hesitated but he could n't take that hesitation as a refusal .
5 Also , the need to treat each instalment as a separate amount for ageing purposes means that a great deal of care will need to be given to the analysis of repayment mortgages .
6 ‘ Although it was horrible to lose my titles , I look back at that fight as a great experience . ’
7 Whether or not Woolwich can claim to be awarded that interest depends on whether it had a cause of action to recover each payment as a debt due it on the date when it was made .
8 Finally , it is becoming increasingly evident that scientific enquiry is an ongoing narrative through which generations of thinkers have sought to understand the world around them , and also that narrative as a mode of knowledge can be used as a means of accommodating the logical paradoxes of contemporary sciences .
9 For instance , it enabled him to use the very struggle for a subject , which had occupied so much of his line , since we can partly see that struggle as a struggle within Milton over his own humanist heritage .
10 This makes it easy to use each crayon as a fine , crisp ‘ tool ’ as well as a blunter one or rubbed on its side .
11 Because of the extensions of the life of that Parliament as a consequence of the war , she had to wait until 1945 to fight an election , which she won with a majority of 665 .
12 Somewhat in contrast to these findings about Thatcher and Kinnock , the visibility of all ‘ other ’ Conservative and Labour politicians ( taken in each case as a collective , unspecified ‘ other ’ ) became more predictable as the election approached .
13 Somewhat in contrast to these findings about Thatcher and Kinnock , the visibility of all ‘ other ’ Conservative and Labour politicians , taken in each case as a collective ‘ other ’ , became more predictable as the election approached .
14 He appeared to ignore her , saying his folly had been to believe one could sell a newspaper with as little responsibility as a man selling apples off a stall .
15 The presentation of that election as a popular referendum prevented a new populist attack on the Unionist government .
16 I tend to use each kilometre as a ‘ four minute trot ’ .
17 Eddie would have to be pretty discreet about her relationship with Angy if she wanted to persuade Aunt Rosina to hand over that sketch as a keepsake .
18 Even if the typical criminal sanction holds out little hope as a general deterrent , does it act as a specific deterrent ?
19 Eighteen patients admitted to hospital after team assessment were reviewed by the research psychiatrist and included in this study , but one subject who was seen first by the research psychiatrist and admitted after that interview as a matter of urgency was excluded , leaving a study sample of 100 cases .
20 The important thing is to approach each interview as a totally separate entity .
21 You can take that tin that you got in er you can take that tin as a pencil case that you got pardon ?
22 Anthropologists and sociologists agree that religion as a sacred world-view is virtually impossible in advanced industrial societies .
23 To use that characterisation as a justification for removing from the definition any requirement of actual fighting as an element in the definition is bootstrap reasoning of an advanced order .
24 I had begun to look on that photograph as a mascot for my enterprise .
25 In a careful schemata he identifies five elements which have to be taken account of , namely , productive base , labour process , ownership of capital , specific social relations ( in civil society although Cooke does not employ that term as a compendium ) and institutional specificities .
26 There remains , however , a wide range of views covering more obviously political aspects of the phenomena which could only be described together as ‘ elitist ’ if we accept that term as a residual category .
27 It 's almost always about the sort of fringe things that happen in schools , the not strictly educational erm organisational matters about when to bring bits of equipment and which day the term 's going to finish , but very few schools put much into writing about how they teach maths , or what the children are going to be doing that term as a topic .
28 While much has been written about that industry as a whole , relatively little is known about the individual firms in it .
29 A board was nominated to run each industry as a viable commercial enterprise .
30 There was no doubt I had emerged from that episode as a complete Charlie .
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