Example sentences of "[noun] have to take [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Any description of the service sector has to take into account the legacy of what has become known as the Fisher/Clark thesis or the ‘ three-sector , model of economic growth . |
2 | In compiling the full fixtures for the season , programme planners had to take into account a first division increased in size by two to 16 , plus this autumn 's tour by New Zealand . |
3 | In compiling the full fixtures for the season , programme planners had to take into account a first division increased in size by two to 16 , plus this autumn 's tour by New Zealand . |
4 | The deputy judge had to take into account also the other evidence relevant to the issue of testamentary competence . |
5 | In deciding what procedures to use the project team had to take into account the fact that few of the schools associated with the study were likely to have moved towards a Cockcroft curriculum . |
6 | The output comparisons have to take into account social , economic and political considerations : it may just be that in Rochester the residents prefer not to have to drag their refuse up the garden path , at any price . |
7 | However , managing these principles has to take into account the fact that : |
8 | Turning to the prices of individual stocks , in many cases the price is above par ( £100 ) because of the fall in interest rates , so investors have to take into account the fact that if they hold the stock to maturity they will incur a capital loss . |
9 | The design of policy has to take into account the ambiguity of the welfare analysis outlined in the previous section . |
10 | However , this £200 had to take into account the expense of all the other public revenue services received by the client : the costs of the other services were deducted from the notional £200 and the residue could be used to buy in extra home support . ’ |
11 | Pressure-group activity is only one factor that the government has to take into account in deciding policy , and the group 's importance to the government and community is susceptible of various interpretations . |
12 | When investing abroad , an investor has to take into account a number of factors that are not relevant when investing in the domestic economy . |
13 | The latter , though , might just be assimilated to the factors that the subject has to take into account under operant conditioning . |
14 | However , for a discount security with more than six months ( 182 days ) to maturity , the bond equivalent yield has to take into account the fact that the corresponding bond makes two coupon payments and that interest is earned by investing the first coupon . |
15 | In doing so , the Church has to take into account ‘ the Tradition ’ — the consensus of teaching and practice down the centuries . |
16 | For Luther only truth needed to be considered : Cranmer had to take into account the fact that the majority of the English population were probably still Catholics at heart . |
17 | Then , as this piling-up process has proceeded , it has created new interests which future developments have to take into account . |
18 | These needs will have to take into account factors such as the governing body 's statutory responsibility for implementing the National Curriculum and the points about employment rights made later . |
19 | Relationships can be far freer within a secure framework than when partners or children have to take into account the possible collapse of the whole basic structure . |
20 | The mutual help system has to take into account things like holidays and emergency backup . |
21 | Future studies evaluating mechanisms of gastrin release have to take into account the H pylori state . |
22 | And maybe that is part of real life , maybe that is a fact of life that women have to take on board , but perhaps men have to take it on board a bit more as well . |
23 | In it , the Welsh Office stated that a solution for Wales had to take into account four major factors which distinguished it from England : the Welsh Office had been responsible for public sector higher education in Wales since 1978 ; the scale of the problem was quite different in that only eight local authorities and a small number of colleges were involved ; the Regional Advisory Council for the whole of Wales , the WJEC , was made up of these local authorities ; and it did not make sense , either on economic or educational grounds , to expect colleges in Wales to provide as wide a range of provision as would be expected in England . |