Example sentences of "see section " in BNC.
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1 | Once the death is registered , a white certificate is issued free of charge , which contains a social security form to claim any arrears of benefits due to the estate of the deceased person and to ensure that the correct benefits are paid to the widow ( if applicable ) ; and a green certificate for burial or cremation ( see Section 2 ) . |
2 | It is important to check whether the dead person left any instructions with the Will about the funeral , or wished the body to be given for medical research ( see Section 7 ) , or organs to be donated for transplantation ( see Section 8 ) . |
3 | It is important to check whether the dead person left any instructions with the Will about the funeral , or wished the body to be given for medical research ( see Section 7 ) , or organs to be donated for transplantation ( see Section 8 ) . |
4 | It is important to check whether the deceased has already made arrangements for their own funeral , or carried funeral insurance ( see Section 6 ) . |
5 | If relatives can not afford to pay for the funeral they should seek assistance from the Department of Social Security ( DSS ) ( see Section 4 ) . |
6 | Failure to comply with the SAO is a summary offence , as is failure to cause a pupil registered at a school to attend regularly ( see section 39(1) ) . |
7 | All that is learnt must be carried over into real-life situations , so training of parents is very important ( see section on ‘ Groups in the Institute ’ ) . |
8 | Care must be taken over the signs of relationships , specifying which category has been selected as the base for comparison ( see section 8.2 ) . |
9 | This is illustrated by the fact that there is little natural forest left in western Europe as a whole and that forest resources were much prized by colonial powers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ( see section 4.4.2 in relation to North America ) . |
10 | To this end , Tang reports that some 13.8 million ha of Malaysia 's forests have been designated as permanent forest estate ( PFE ) , of which 9.1 × 10 6 ha are productive forests that are intended to be managed on a sustained yield basis ( see section 8.2.1 for a definition ) . |
11 | Another counterexample proposed by Stoyanov ( 1979 ) has proved to be incorrect as it does not satisfy the required boundary conditions ( see Section 10.2 ) . |
12 | See section 4 below for further discussion of this . |
13 | See section on ‘ Other forms of income ’ later in this chapter . ) |
14 | But then , since , the problem is unbounded for θ > θ ( see Section 3.4 ) and the solution is complete . |
15 | VAT : See section on VAT above . |
16 | Although not defined under the Road Traffic Act it is considered that having regard to the spirit of the legislation that the definition used in other Acts would apply viz : Includes any place to which the public have access whether on payment or otherwise , e.g. fields where the public can park for a race meeting or traction engine rally , footpaths or bridleways ( unless the Act states otherwise : see section 22A ( 5 ) of the Road Traffic Act 1988 ) , or anywhere where the public could be at risk from mechanically propelled vehicles . |
17 | ( See section for full list . ) ’ |
18 | To add a new word into the dawg , the current structure would need to be searched both forwards and backwards to establish whether or not the required paths exist , which would slow down the building algorithm ( see section 3.3.3 ) . |
19 | See section 3.3.4 and section 3.3.5 for results of comparisons of implementations . |
20 | Therefore the search can be terminated before the complete candidate string is generated from the graph of data ( see section 2.4 and figure 2.8 ) . |
21 | If the combined ranks give an equal result , using the combined probabilities to order those allowable candidate strings with the same ranks gives good results ( see section 2.3 for details of ranks and probabilities ) . |
22 | It is also interesting to note that for 33 out of the 36 errors , the top rated candidate strings have the same overall word shape as the intended words ( see section 5.3.3.2 for further discussion of word shape ) . |
23 | Figures are not collected for people with AIDS Related Complex ( ARC ) , which can be an equally disturbing disease ( see Section 4 ) . |
24 | For this reason , the divide between ‘ unavoidable ’ and ‘ normal additional spending ’ ( see section following ) is fraught with obvious difficulty . |
25 | Recent ethnography of writing has demonstrated that the same is true for many contemporary societies now labelled ‘ literate ’ ; much of the practice turns out to be , as in Iran ( see below , Section 2 ) , writing names on crates of produce , keeping records of business transactions , writing cheques etc. , or , as in English factories , reading warning or instruction labels , one-word sign symbols and signing names or filling in forms ( see Section 3 ) . |
26 | Mr Snoop may bring a civil action claiming damages for breach of the booking contract between himself and the Hotel Bograte , including damages for disappointment ( see section 8.1 above ) . |
27 | Weiner the Project Leader ( see Section 6.3 on OED Project Management ) . |
28 | The courts have also developed a set of rules embodied in the doctrine of ultra vires ( see Section B ) which impose certain limitations on the substance of governmental actions and decisions . |
29 | Each member originally contributed 75 per cent of its quota in domestic currency and the remaining 25 per cent in gold , although the latter proportion must now be contributed in other reserve assets such as foreign currencies or SDRs ( see Section 8.2.5 ) . |
30 | Such a development would aid economic and political union and , like the existence of a common currency between regions of the same country ( see Section 7.2.2 ) , would facilitate capital account adjustment between member countries . |