Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [prep] [noun] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They both convey information from which the hearer could work out how well B got on with semantics that week .
2 Then the neighbours and family who are relied on to share some daily task become more evidently part of the social system , or family system of that elderly person .
3 The object of the executors ' year is to protect the personal representatives from demands for immediate payment but it is not to be relied on to cover undue delay in dealing with the estate .
4 There was no major saint-cult which could be relied on to bolster episcopal power .
5 If previous experience is any guide , politicians can not be relied on to lead that debate .
6 Well it was erm , making me go back to something that goes on in branch all the time .
7 Of the regional erm team and erm , and erm , he was asked to go , to go on to play international
8 In a remarkable record , he was to go on to win two further bars , in France that year and in Germany in 1945 .
9 For instance , if we want a trajectory that goes then we start in region 1 ; to get to region 3 we must be in the right-hand " third " of region 1 ; if we are going to go on from region 3 to region 4 , we must be in the right-hand " third " of that " third " ; and , to go on to region 2 , in the left " third " of that " third " , etc .
10 After these general guidelines , it may be helpful to go on to review some of the most popular cuisines and eating places .
11 The referee , however , allowed play to go on with Everton prostrate and protesting and when the cross came over the defence seemed to use less than legal means to stop Chapman reaching it .
12 Still alive , and ready to go on until August 1977 .
13 For instance , if we want a trajectory that goes then we start in region 1 ; to get to region 3 we must be in the right-hand " third " of region 1 ; if we are going to go on from region 3 to region 4 , we must be in the right-hand " third " of that " third " ; and , to go on to region 2 , in the left " third " of that " third " , etc .
14 Once you got down to Question 11 , the questioner would get a deeply unhelpful written response which would , if the civil servants knew their business , leave no one any the wiser .
15 ( These included 13,000 based in Panama and an extra 2,000 troops flown in on Dec. 23 to restore order in Panama City . )
16 The vehicle fulfils the conditions laid down under s 159 ICTA 1988 excepting clause 2(c) .
17 The regulation of British Gas followed the general principles laid down for BT two years earlier , so it will suffice to concentrate on the latter .
18 As such it is seen as the first part of a larger work , to be completed by sequel works of a similar kind but which will be separately specified and will be covered by separate agreements in accordance with the terms and conditions laid down in Clause 14.1 .
19 President Bush had announced to the US Congress on Jan. 15 his decision to release US$42,500,000 in military aid to El Salvador , on the grounds that guerrillas of the FMLN had failed to comply with certain conditions laid down in October 1990 , when the United States decided to withhold the aid [ see p. 37770 ] .
20 On the other hand , there is the blueprint for EMU laid down in stages two and three of the Delors report , a far more ambitious scheme which would mean a European central bank , a single currency , a framework for budgetary policy and , in effect , pave the way for political union .
21 Once such an amendment of the articles is in place we would suggest that the chairman of the board ( or the company secretary ) should ascertain each board member 's decision by phone and minute as follows : ‘ Following the procedure laid down in Art 93 ( or whatever ) of the company 's articles the board resolves that … ‘ .
22 The defendants applied to have the plaintiffs ' actions struck out on the ground that the proper forum for any claim against them was Scotland and that the special jurisdiction laid down in articles 5 and 6 of the Convention on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters 1968 , scheduled to the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982did not apply so as to permit the defendants to be sued in England , notwithstanding that they were domiciled in Scotland .
23 It is therefore also common ground that prima facie Glasgow must be sued in Scotland because of course it is domiciled in Scotland , and that the banks are only entitled to sue in England if they can bring themselves within the special jurisdiction laid down in articles 5 and 6 of Schedule 4 .
24 However , only fishing vessels fulfilling the conditions laid down in section 14 of the Act of 1988 might be registered in the new register .
25 Accordingly , the Commission took the view that the residence requirements laid down in section 14 of the Act of 1988 were contrary to article 52 of the E.E.C .
26 However , only fishing vessels fulfilling the conditions laid down in section 14 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1988 may be registered in the new register .
27 However , only fishing vessels fulfilling the conditions laid down in section 14 of the Act of 1988 could be registered in the new register .
28 ‘ the general prohibition of discrimination on grounds of nationality laid down in article 7 of the [ E.E.C . ]
29 The banks having failed to bring themselves within any of the special jurisdictions laid down in article 5 or 6 , article 2 prevails , and Glasgow must be sued in their court of domicile in Scotland .
30 Breakage is defined by the criteria laid down in figure 3.2 .
  Next page