Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] [art] terms on " in BNC.

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1 His hands were very full with arrangements for his attack on Normandy , and there must also have been many discussions about the terms on which he would be willing to make peace with the papacy .
2 If the above conditions were not acceptable , then those officers who had recently joined should be allowed to return to their original units as the terms on which they had volunteered no longer applied .
3 Nor is it determined by contemporary attitudes towards the terms on which corporate status is made available .
4 Later on , interest centred on the revision of the terms on which schemes can contract out of the State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme and the profession commented on the Government Actuary 's proposals for the rebate in National Insurance contributions from 1993 onwards .
5 The initial bone of contention was the question of the terms on which sympathizers should be admitted to the Party .
6 The initial bone of contention was the question of the terms on which sympathizers should be admitted to the party .
7 Although there is no absolute legal requirement , it is safest to ensure that there is some reference to the terms on the face of the document ; for instance : This order is for the supply of goods subject to the terms printed overleaf or We acknowledge receipt of your order and agree to supply you , subject to our terms printed overleaf .
8 The advertisement does not offer to supply , on request , a written quotation about the terms on which the creditor is prepared to do business .
9 Here the money was paid by a third person , and I have no doubt that , upon the acceptance of that money by the plaintiffs with full knowledge of the terms on which it was offered , the debt was absolutely extinguished .
10 There is some support for the proposition that such a loan , if made to a person fully capable of repaying the same and , for instance , charged against property in the United Kingdom , gives the taxpayer minimal benefit from the case of O " Leary v McKinlay [ 1991 ] STC 42 where Vinelott J at p51 , dealing with a Schedule E beneficial loan , stated the following : If an employer lends money to an employee free of interest or at a favourable rate of interest and if the employee is free to exploit the money in any manner he chooses his employment can not be said to have been the source of the income derived from the exploitation ; the employer is the source of the money and the taxpayer is assessable to tax under Sch E on the benefit to him of obtaining the loan on the terms on which the loan was made ; but if the loan is repayable on demand that benefit can not be quantified and form the basis of an assessment under Sch E. It is arguable if property is held by a non-resident trust for A for life and B absolutely that if the trustees lend money to A at interest then if A allows the trustees not to pursue him in his capacity as borrower for the interest that no benefit will arise .
11 Investigation was a lengthy process taking many months , a delay during which company share prices could move considerably and upset the original negotiations about the terms on which the relative shares of the companies should be valued .
12 However , the Society 's support is conditional upon the negotiations achieving an improvement in a number of the terms on offer .
13 Section 16(2) provides : [ t ] he cases in which a pecuniary advantage … is to be regarded as obtained for a person are cases where — ( b ) he is allowed to borrow by way of overdraft , or to take out any policy of insurance or annuity contract , or obtains an improvement of the terms on which he is allowed to do so ; or
14 In effect he took account of the terms on each side of ( 8–57 ) , which imply .
15 Notably absent from his remarks were any clear or explicit indications of the terms on which he would agree to return or any clear or explicit criticism of the insurrection in Algiers .
16 In discussing proposals with parents and the LEA the governors would need to be fully aware of the possible educational and financial consequences including the terms on which support services for special needs would still be available , and at what cost , from the LEA or elsewhere .
17 The faction still wanting their own building on the workhouse grounds continued to press their case , but were finally defeated by the local government board , which raised serious objections concerning the terms on which the guardians held the land and the details of the proposed building .
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