Example sentences of "[art] [adj] cause or [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Brian 's body was so badly mutilated and charred that the pathologists could not determine the exact cause or time of death .
2 This was usually the advance of a political cause or party , and , less often than before 1945 , the pursuit of their own public or political career .
3 They could focus on their wider family , or their spouse , or a continuing job , or a social cause or hobby , or their own physical health .
4 The question is thus whether the proceedings before Barnett J. constituted a civil cause or matter .
5 I.C.A.C. sought to appeal , and the occupiers contested the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal , on the ground that the order of the judge was not made in a civil cause or matter .
6 It seemed to the court that in its current form the civil components of the process of judicial review were so strong that an application which claimed the civil relief authorised by section 21K was to be regarded as a civil cause or matter .
7 Crime is a complex social phenomenon with no single cause or solution .
8 It is in reference to the nature of that proceeding that it must be determined whether there was an order made in a criminal cause or matter .
9 Every order made in such a cause or matter by an English court , is an order in a criminal cause or matter , even though the order , taken by itself , is neutral in character and might equally have been made in a cause or matter which is not criminal .
10 After citing passages from Amand 's case Sir John Donaldson M.R. , with whose judgment Kerr and Lloyd L.JJ. agreed , observed , at p. 977 , that he could not think of a case in which the order appealed from arose more clearly in a criminal cause or matter .
11 963 , 970–971 , expressed no doubt whatsoever that an order or a refusal of an order by a criminal judge for the production of documents under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 was properly described as an order in a criminal cause or matter .
12 ‘ The appeal proceedings were intituled on the civil side of the court ( although their Lordships have no doubt that they were proceedings in a criminal cause or matter ) …
13 Later , his Lordship cited Amand v. Home Secretary and Minister of Defence of Royal Netherlands Government [ 1943 ] A.C. 147 , and in particular one of the passages from the speech of Viscount Simon L.C. , at p. 156 , quoted above , as clear authority for the view that the proceedings were in a criminal cause or matter .
14 The certiorari and prohibition proceedings constituted a criminal cause or matter , as would a habeas corpus application if the subject matter were criminal in the sense described in Amand v. Home Secretary and the Minister of Defence of Royal Netherlands Government [ 1943 ] A.C. 147 .
15 Counsel for all the appellants and for the Secretary of State were unanimous in their view that the appeals are not in a criminal cause or matter , and on a brief consideration of the relevant authorities I agree .
16 We are looking for a sufficient cause or reason for the legal enforcement of a promise .
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