Example sentences of "[adj] [conj] the [noun sg] in " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Moreover that growth has been greatest where the decline in manufacturing employment has been least — that is , in the regions of ‘ the south ’ .
2 Arechaga concludes from this that the treaty in its final form could be amended by the parties without regard to third parties ’ navigation rights .
3 At the time when rent levels were falling , some less profitable land also went out of cultivation ( although the extent of this is hard to measure ) , so it is clear that the fall in rents must have been due to a shortage of potential tenants rather than to a greater supply of land , which might have resulted from the clearance of forest or the reclamation of fenland .
4 The Duke insisted that ‘ its fitt it be understood … for it might give umbrage to Achinbowie and Balfunning ’ , and he was very clear that the gentleman in question , the son of Glengyle , should not , under any circumstances , join Lord George 's ship .
5 It is clear that the decision in Francovich does no more than usher in the doctrine of state liability for failure to legislate and that the full impact of the doctrine remains to be established .
6 First and foremost he had made it clear that the decision in the imperial affair as to who was the " suitable " ( idoneus ) ruler must rest in his hands .
7 This interpretation makes it quite clear that the disposition in the will has failed , and that it is only thanks to the trust clause that the nurses do obtain this additional income .
8 This was because the terms of the contract between seller and buyer made it clear that the buyer in re-selling the goods was doing so , not for his own account , but as agent for , and on account of , the seller .
9 It is now clear that the change in basal-subtracted EC 5 on eradication plus healing is only a mathematical consequence of the fall in gastrin driven basal acid secretion .
10 For my part , I think it is clear that the court in Ex parte Handscomb , 86 Cr.App.R. 59 did decide what Mr. Douglas Hurd understood it decided , namely , that in setting the tariff for prisoners serving discretionary life sentences , the Secretary of State is obliged to adopt the judicial view .
11 An inspector may revise the accounting period to which an extended time limit assessment applies where it is clear that the period in question is a point of contention with the taxpayer .
12 In such actions , it is clear that the analysis in the first paragraph holds good , whoever the parties actually are .
13 Answer guide : In this case the uncertainty is mitigated as the life is clearly known and it is also clear that the loss in utility relates to time .
14 In conclusion , it is clear that the market in the UK is maturing and the executive search product is starting to come to age .
15 The prose which preoccupied Milton during the Commonwealth and Protectorate periods was to be seen as separate and certainly intrinsically less interesting than the poetry in which Parker portrays Milton participating in some universalised European humanism .
16 Yet William was made well-aware that the crisis in England which had led to his invitation had been brought about mainly by the opposition of the Anglican interest , something he implicitly recognised in his invasion propaganda .
17 President Jaime Lusinchi , afraid that the drop in oil prices in 1986 might hurt his party in elections in 1988 , ran down the reserves .
18 Defence Minister Antonio Ermán González announced on Nov. 2 that the reduction in number of senior officers , due to begin " this year " , would be between 25 and 30 per cent , with a more gradual three- or five-year plan for officers below the rank of general , admiral or brigadier .
19 The suggestion was discussed in Chapter 2 that the manner in which a pen is held in the hand during writing may be used as an index of speech lateralisation .
20 It is interesting that the rise in chronic disease parallels the rise in the chemicalization of our food .
21 It is also interesting that the loop in figure 1 has not introduced the real world " element , that of change in the environment , affecting the nature of the systems requirements .
22 Ventilation in 19th century mines was very primitive and the air in the confined space in which a passage was being cleared , soon became foul and lacking in oxygen .
23 If the widening of the 20 per cent lower income tax band to £3,000 in 1993/94 is taken into account ( which will be worth a further £25 a year to all basic and higher rate taxpayers ) , then the net effect of this and the change in the MCA on a married man aged under 65 who pays tax at the basic rate of 25 per cent will be an increase in tax of £1.17 a week or about £61 a year .
24 This and the replication in Murchison House , Edinburgh , of courses given at Keyworth led to a substantial increase in staff attendance .
25 ‘ Most significant has been the continuing increase in the number of long-term unemployed and the slump in business optimism .
26 The debtor was prima facie in the wrong and the creditor in the right , and it was up to the former to extricate himself from the charge to which he had laid himself open .
27 The typical expectation of the average level of prices will rise to P 2 and the shift in aggregate demand will have no effect on real output .
28 This is shown in the ANOVA in Table 2 and the graph in Figure 1 .
29 And yet the very division between the literate and the non-literate in the countryside was a powerful force for change .
30 Dobry 's view that ‘ it is not so much the system which is wrong but the way in which it is used ’ was endorsed , and his Final Report was commended to students of our planning system as an invaluable compendium of information about the working of the existing development control process , and to local authorities and developers as a source of advice on the best way to operate within it .
  Next page