Example sentences of "[noun] are [verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 BLACK MUSLIMS FROM the Nation of Islam are gathered in force outside the Hackney Empire .
2 Affection and dread are mixed in ambivalence , grief becomes guilt , and often a disgust factor at the kind of tasks to be undertaken compounds the pain ( Ungerson , 1987 ) .
3 Advertisements sent to relevant European institutions are exempt because those institutions are treated as Art 9(3) experts in relation to investment advertisements relating to activities falling within their home-regulated business ( see para 44 of Sched 10 to the Banking Co-ordination Regulations ) .
4 Three institutions are proposed for case study : a large private firm ; a civil service department ; and a national trade union .
5 The finely detailed bas-relief ornaments are applied by hand today , as they were in Josiah 's day .
6 The main EEC based investment aid is through the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Scheme ( AHDS ) whereby enhanced rates of grant are paid for land in the LFA 's ‘ severely disadvantaged ’ zone .
7 The motor manufacturing giant General Motors leads the field , and the first ten of the top R&D spenders are dominated by motor companies and the electronics industry .
8 Whenever liquids or greases are used during maintenance , all excess spillages must be cleared up as quickly as possible and before the equipment is put back into operation .
9 Yet most mines are interspersed with farming communities .
10 The warehouses are built of stone and have wooden beam hoists on the gable walls .
11 Notes are made on VIP guests , any tour groups , seminars or special events , and the diary is used to alert and remind the front office staff of the expected activity on that day .
12 ‘ These notes are written in German .
13 Information on possible risk factors for leukaemia and non-Hodgkin 's lymphoma reported at interview and recorded in the obstetric notes are summarised in table VII .
14 Note how the highest ( and loudest ) notes are kept in reserve for this decisive bar .
15 When your notes are growing in volume they are much too valuable to be carried around and perhaps lost .
16 There is available for the certificate home study , where no tutor is involved but readings and notes are used for solo study .
17 The second requires a social psychology of the symbolic universe in which acts are endowed with meaning and the commonsense accounts which are offered within such a universe to render the imposed concept of deviance intelligible .
18 It is one of the quirks of modern society that even when acts are passed by Parliament and signed by the Sovereign , they do not always take effect .
19 This is particularly unlikely to happen if , as is often the case , guide-lines are constructed with reference to existing sentencing levels .
20 The satellites are listed in Table 9.1 .
21 The type and frequency of their interactions are summarized in Table 4.3 .
22 Discussions are continuing with LCD regarding long term proposals to improve the legal aid system and the best methods of remuneration for the Bar .
23 Considerable discussions are needed among subject teachers , guidance staff and the health education co-ordinator to ensure that each knows which aspects of health education are being delivered and by whom .
24 Some decisions are shared equally and the remainder are split between husband and wife .
25 These reasons are given in detail in the discussion of man-machine function allocation ( p. 35 ) .
26 The objective would be to ensure that policy alternatives are adequately considered , that reasons are proffered for agency decisions , and that differing interests can present their views to the agency and have those views adequately discussed .
27 For example , procedural reasons are discussed in Chapter 5 ; reasons associated with imposing liability in tort and contract are discussed in Chapters 12 and 13 ; and reasons associated with the free flow of information in society are considered in Chapters 15 and 16 .
28 Anthropologists , in turn , have attempted to argue that , for example , the transition from brideservice , in which labour is performed by the prospective groom , to bridewealth , where objects are given in exchange for the bride , marks a significant difference in the development of a phenomenon whereby objects may stand for human labour , with the implication that this is the first stage towards the conditions of property and alienation as we know them today ( Strathern 1985 ) .
29 The returns are related to performance , but that is not surprising these days .
30 Individual returns are published for interest only and not because there is any competitive element .
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