Example sentences of "[adj] [conj] [art] [noun] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 ( f ) Insurance If the matrimonial home is in the sole name of the husband then it is best to change the insurance arrangements once agreement is reached or the court order made ; the husband may neglect or to be unnecessary where the property already stands in the joint names of husband and wife and a separate declaration of trust is made .
2 The law of nuisance , therefore , affords little or no protection either to a complainant who is unduly sensitive to an odour emission , or where the use interfered with is a sensitive one , as when the taste of biscuits manufactured under controlled conditions , was adversely affected by odorous fumes from a source a few miles away .
3 The type of orientation described above is often given when students have little or no motivation actually to use the library .
4 These sites , in their simplest form , betray little or no development away from the main frontages and there appears to have been no obvious urban focus within the plan .
5 On March 8 Labour Minister Norbert Blüm announced the government 's intention to extend by six months ( to end-1991 ) its " short-time " policy , whereby employees for whom there was little or no work nevertheless received 70 per cent of their salary rather than be made redundant .
6 This material is largely undated , although it is clear that occupation along Ermine Street pre-dated the defences and continued with little or no change well into the fourth century .
7 Erm , of course it has to be remembered that all these lectures , or at least most of them , were erm voluntary compulsion and the men used to turn up because they were told to and er whether or not they showed little or no interest very often and it was all erm well a bit of a waste of time .
8 The vorticity intensification process will be strongest where the vorticity already happens to be large .
9 Someone must keep them calm or the scissors soon start to fly .
10 The act of shipping the barley in Maynegrain was assumed to be sufficient to amount to conversion , but the position is different where the defendant innocently interferes with P 's goods whether upon his own initiative or upon the instructions of another , when the defendant 's act amounts to nothing more than transport or custody of the goods .
11 ‘ My Lords , it seems to me clear that the law plainly took the wrong turning in Sheridan 's case [ 1937 ] 1 K.B .
12 Thus , unless s83 above applies , a mortgaged property transferred from one spouse to another or into joint names will incur a charge to stamp duty unless it is clear that the transferor alone remains liable for the debt .
13 It was all too clear that the writers actually understood little about the subject matter , and that the understanding they succeeded in imparting to the public was correspondingly less .
14 In April a report issued by the US State Department made it clear that the USA also did not intend to rejoin the organization , citing as one of its reasons the organization 's lack of budgetary restraint [ see p. 37888 ]
15 This justification was provided by the castle of Clairvaux and it is clear that the scheme very nearly worked .
16 Referring again to the Mondragon experience , it is clear that the planners there recognise the economic advantages to be gained from the formation of larger units .
17 It is quite clear that the norm so far as qualifications for Inspectors ( Engineering ) are concerned needs to be graduate aeronautical engineering standard plus practical experience .
18 In all his wanderings it is clear that the artist really preferred the Ambleside area .
19 It was clear that the Government now saw itself as taking a greater part in determining TBC policies , and this was confirmed by the addition of an External Service to the TBC 's responsibilities .
20 From the Parliamentary answers to which I have referred , and from the other evidence before us in these appeals , it is clear that the procedure now followed can be summarised as follows .
21 It is clear that the formulae just established provide a method of solution for problem ( a ) since unc and the computer can reciprocate both B and unc and perform the required multiplications .
22 Although 1988 was characterised by a freer , more open intellectual atmosphere , it was clear that the Party still held ultimate authority and would not tolerate criticism that bordered on political dissent .
23 The creamy-white leaves are so conspicuous that the flowers hardly show up at all but the fragrance is breath-taking .
24 Modern avionics items exhibit such a variety of failure modes and are so reliable that the tradesman often forgets how he cured a particular type of fault when he experiences another of the same type .
25 ‘ I 've no more idea of who did this than the police apparently have . ’
26 He noted that the government commission which he had established to investigate the Parys affair had paid more attention to this than the commission later appointed at Walesa 's request [ see p. 38881 ] .
27 Flying direct from Cairo to Paris and surviving the worst earthquakes that Egypt has ever suffered might sound excellent training for Paris Fashion Week , but proved to be more rigorous than the event strictly called for .
28 The Kent County cricketing team came again , beating Henley 20 — 2 although the Standard bravely reported it ‘ not to be as one-sided as it might appear ’ .
29 Where the terrain becomes so steep that the leader no longer has a reasonable likelihood of controlling a slide , then belays of some form should be taken for the seconds .
30 From the buyer 's point of view this is a totally acceptable situation , and it will be seen from cll 6.1 , 6.2 and 6.3 of Precedent 2 that the buyer here provides for express warranties against infringement , coupled with an indemnity against the consequences of such infringement .
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