Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [verb] any [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 If the chaining method is used , the lack of a home record will lead to the inability to retrieve any record further along the chain .
2 What accountability rests on is that those particular representatives of the local authority have the opportunity to ask any question and have it answered at any time during the three hundred and sixty five days of the year in which we operate , and they are in a specially privileged position to challenge , or question , or talk about , or have answered — any particular point with regard to the work we 're involved with .
3 Their views trickled down through the student nurses ' years and were apt to be accepted as gospel , since that saved the students the bother of forming opinions for themselves , and also it was not often a student in her first couple of years , if not longer , had the opportunity to form any opinion on our men .
4 Obviously I enjoyed having the opportunity to watch any nesting birds so close at hand — I could reach out of my bedroom window , when Mum was n't around , and feel right inside the nest — but many of the neighbours looked on the house martins as pests who infested their property and made a mess .
5 On the other hand , if the conditions are to be fulfilled at the expiry of the term , the tenant will have the opportunity to remedy any breach of covenant between the service of the notice and its expiry ( Simons v Associated Furnishers Ltd [ 1931 ] 1 Ch 379 ) .
6 When your technique is good , it gives you the opportunity to create any type of situation on the court .
7 Does the Chancellor of the Exchequer recognise that 2 , 700,000 people out there would welcome the opportunity to pay any income tax ?
8 It takes up where MacPuke left off , offering a whole range of activities the computer is likely to perform , and the opportunity to attach any sound to them .
9 This will certainly give the driver the opportunity to raise any objection he may have to giving blood , either on medical grounds or indeed for any other reason which might afford a ‘ reasonable excuse ’ under section 7(6) .
10 The aquarium must be placed on polystyrene base mats , covering the whole area of the base to spread any pressure points that will lead to disaster .
11 One wonders if the Captain-General had any idea of the utter impossibility of navigating at 75°S , for on this longitudinal track his ships would be stuck fast in the thick ice-of the Weddell Sea , hemmed in by the unimagined continent and unendurable cold of the Antarctic .
12 At other times I may be delighted to see them , for if the writing is not going well the writer welcomes any excuse to lay down his pen or turn away from the typewriter .
13 If the creditor holds any security , he must specify the nature and value of the security and the demand must be for the unsecured portion of the creditor 's claim only .
14 According to the report , during the course of the interview the Sheik rejected any possibility of a hostage exchange .
15 Quantity This system allows the drafter to use any number of sub-divisions within a clause : a sub-clause can be further sub-divided into paragraphs as follows : 8 .
16 And although it is true that Wagner could , if required , have figured under various of their headings , it seems that the decision to lay any emphasis on the relevance of Wagner 's work to his own ideas represented a further and final development .
17 In such cases , where the component is unsuitable for its purpose , it is quite unlikely that the seller will even know what its intended use was , and , even if he did , it would frequently be clearly unreasonable for the buyer to place any reliance on the judgment and skill of the seller in relation to use in apparatus in respect of which the buyer himself was an expert , since he was its manufacturer .
18 The difficulty facing any county politician in relation to the collectorship of the cess was his inability to please everyone .
19 Should the person in charge of the chart see any item that was likely to fall behind , he pinned a flag at this particular point , and if the article was likely to be held up for want of raw material a blue flag was pinned up ; but if this delay was due to one or other of the works departments getting behind with the manufacture , a red flag with a numeral upon it was used , which indicated the shop or department .
20 3.6 Reference to " the Premises " in the absence of any provision to the contrary include any part of the Premises
21 The very architecture of the building rebuffs any attempt at hoopla .
22 ‘ Does the interview with the Admiral make any difference to anything ? ’
23 When the user selects any option , having already accessed the system during the current session , LIFESPAN PMR 's cache facility will automatically display the previous information input for each field .
24 Allows the user to visit any input field of an option directly .
25 This means a single sector for sector-oriented devices , or one record per bucket in systems that allow the user to choose any bucket size within the capacity of the device .
26 In a case where the reason for requiring a specimen of blood or urine arises under section 7(3) , there is no question of the driver having any option to exercise .
27 The biggest reason for Asia 's sceptical eye on the Gulf , though , is that not many Asians are convinced the fight makes any difference .
28 Discourse analysts are rather vague about what they mean by ‘ conversation ’ too , and some seem to use the term to describe any kind of oral interaction .
29 Both are concerned to see if the term has any value in explanation .
30 5.17.3 to remove all signs erected by the Tenant in upon or near the Premises and immediately to make good any damage caused by such removal It is advisable ( at least for the purpose of this clause ) for the tenant to ensure that the term includes any period of holding over or continuation of the contractual term ( as it does in this lease by virtue of clause 3.8 ) although it must be considered highly unlikely that the tenant would be forced to yield up the premises to the landlord during a continuation under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 .
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