Example sentences of "[conj] the return to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In the extreme case , there is no mobility of labour at all ( as in Jones , 1971b ) , and the implications of such immobility for the incidence of the corporation tax have been examined in Section 6–4 , where we saw that implies that the return to capital definitely falls ( relative to p y ) as a result of the tax .
2 The ‘ domino effect ’ was only partly successful , however , and this was very substantially responsible for both the course of the dispute and the lack of any final outcome , other than the return to work in March , 1985 .
3 In the longer term the failure of the National Coalition , and the Conservative and Labour governments in the 1920s , to create the ‘ home fit for heroes ’ , turned some towards more radical solutions for Britain 's problems than the return to normalcy and safety-first politics of what Mosley was to call the old gangs of British politics .
4 if the return to Conservatism is to be something more than the transient apparition of a spectre from the past , and its voice in national affairs not merely to be a sepulchral warning against the dangers of rash courses , the Conservative leaders must bestir themselves to some purpose … [ the Conservative Party ] must be ready to meet the programme of the Labour Party not simply with a non-possumus but with an alternative which will in some measure satisfy certain of the needs which Labour is concerned to satisfy , and at the same time avoid the perils with which it insists Labour policy is beset .
5 In the second instance of the link between the mother and the return to darkness , it can be seen how the mother in our everyday world stands as a figure in which the individual may lose him or herself .
6 The value of shares in firm A is V SL and the return to shareholders , assuming that all earnings are distributed , is which is earnings before tax but after debt interest has been deducted as an allowable expense , less corporation tax .
7 My aim was to investigate the symptoms of decay and perhaps to discover in the ‘ capriciousness and the return to chaos ’ a law which would vouchsafe one an insight into the intimate workings of art .
8 These included a change in the constitutional status of the province so as to make it subordinate to Serbia , the imposition of Serbocroatian as the official language , the dismissal from the Kosovo government of ‘ Albanian chauvinists ’ and of Serbian ‘ opportunists and careerists ’ , and the return to Kosovo of Serbian emigrants ( NIN , 9 November 1986 ) .
9 The government said that it had agreed to allow the phased release of around 1,300 political prisoners after Sept. 1 , and the return to South Africa of around 22,000 anti-government exiles after Oct. 1 .
10 Since then NMW has carried out a heavy rationalisation programme and the return to profits has come despite a fall in turnover from £5.92m to £4.66m .
11 Places on the route through France described in the book are Châlons , Lyons , Avignon , and Marseilles ; it also includes a visit to Nice , and the return to Genoa by the Corniche route .
12 Caesar figures could delay the collapse of civilization and the return to barbarism .
13 But the return to Devon of the engine after expiry of its ten-year boiler ticket is seen as a shot in the arm for the loco-starved South Devon Railway , reliant on externally hired motive power since it came into existence two years ago .
14 But the return to opera has not by any means been a search for a lost past .
15 Because the return to shareholders and the risks in the two firms are identical , the value of the shares in the two firms must also be identical ; i.e. , which by rearranging becomes or , using ( 6.43 ) and the fact that , we get .
16 This pattern , which has also been a feature of aspects of Spanish policy-making since the return to democracy , contrasts with the relatively high degree of continuity , particularly on railway investment policy , of other countries .
17 They might consider , for instance , that their own welfare is linked to the size of the enterprise independently of whether the return to shareholders is maximised , perhaps because high remuneration , power , or prestige are associated with large scale rather than profitability .
18 Freud considers that there may be something intractable in humanity as we know it , a part of our basic psychic constitution which remains uneasy , discontented , even hostile to civilization , and that this finds expression in such romantic ideals as the return to nature .
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