Example sentences of "bear by [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 PA found that 90 per cent of the participants transferring existing senior members of staff now bear all the costs associated with travelling expenses , preliminary visits , removal , temporary accommodation , estate agents ' commission , legal fees and stamp duty together with a disturbance allowance … similar costs are borne by 70 per cent of companies in respect of the relocation of a newly recruited manager although a disturbance allowance is not as common in this instance .
2 This brings me to volatiles borne by small bodies , either during accretion , or subsequently as a veneer .
3 For example labour inputs for erosion works and temporary dislocation of food production , fuel supplies and fodder for livestock may be borne by one group more than another .
4 Resources were obtained from central government under the 1952 Town Development Act and the 1961 Housing Act which subsidized the importation of an over spill population , but these were far less than would have been provided to a designated New Town where all infrastructure costs would have been borne by central government .
5 Whitby and Willis further suggest that the demand for private transport will continue to grow in spite of oil price increases , and that losses arising from over-pricing of oil are disproportionately borne by rural residents .
6 The following year , on the recommendation of the Royal Commission on Income Tax ( 1920 ) , the child allowance was increased to £30 and the income limit removed altogether on the grounds that ‘ in all ranges of income some regard should be had to the taxpayers marital and family responsibilities ’ … and that ‘ rates of tax should be so adjusted that the taxation to be borne by each class should be redistributed among the individual taxpayers in that class with due recognition of family obligations ’ ( Section VIII ) .
7 The comparison was naive in its failure to recognise the burden borne by working class wives , but Becker was rebelling primarily against the idea that the middle class woman should be ‘ kept ’ , if not by a husband then by a father , brother , or other male relative .
8 It is true that the shareholders would make an impact if they were to agree to vote in the same way , but this will usually involve the costs of educating and obtaining the co-operation of other shareholders being borne by individual activist members , and these are likely to outweigh the benefits that will be captured by them , since any increase in the value of the company attributable to intervention will be distributed among the shareholders as a whole .
9 The expense is to be borne by such party as the court may direct ( Ord 50 , r 8 ) , and on a taxation reasonable costs may be allowed ( Ord 38 , r 12 ) .
10 Ivan the Terrible had not only decimated their ranks during the oprichnina but had eroded the distinction between their hereditary property ( votchina ) and the conditional terms of the pomestie by establishing a norm of military service to be borne by all estates .
11 It is an introduction to the lifelong responsibility for continuing study and education borne by all members of the medical profession .
12 Chomsky started by defining the nature of the learning objective — that is , adult grammatical proficiency — and then worked backwards to determine how much of the workload in language learning had to be borne by innate knowledge .
13 I imagine that the brunt of this will be borne by younger voters , many of them voting for the first time , who possibly do not realise that in addition to voting they must also pay poll tax .
14 As the percentage of revenue income derived from grant fell ( from 46.7 per cent in England in 1976/7 to 39.2 per cent in 1984/5 ) so the percentage borne by local ratepayers increased ( from 23 per cent to 27 per cent ) .
15 She paid her account at the Imperial Hotel , and with her maid staggering under six hatboxes followed by a small procession of luggage borne by sturdy footmen , she climbed into a victoria to depart for the railway station .
16 At present , too many of the sacrifices are being borne by those who , for the sake of posterity , should least be called upon to make them .
17 The cost of limiting emissions of greenhouse gases has to be borne by those societies which are responsible for the cumulative increase in their concentration levels .
18 In the meantime the highest costs of these changes are borne by those made redundant as new technologies replace old .
19 Apart from the need to reduce delays in the investigation of complaints there is no more important issue than the need to ensure that serious misconduct is met with suitable sanctions , and that the costs of disciplinary proceedings should , so far as is practicable and just , be borne by those who cause us to incur those costs .
20 In previous Lectures we have examined the incidence of taxation by factors or classes we have asked whether a tax is borne by those receiving capital income or those with wages .
21 The received waves are called radar echoes and they can carry the various categories of information that can be borne by any em wave , as outlined in section 3.1.2 , though planetary temperatures can not normally be extracted by radar .
22 It reflects the fact that the private costs are not borne by them , and the red tape ensures that , if a mistake occurs , blame is not borne by any particular individual but is shared among the bureaucracy .
23 It would clearly constrain the speculative tendencies that are currently all too apparent , and significantly reduce the effects of blight borne by long-suffering communities .
24 The ball was , so to speak , back in the industrialists ' court — the cost of the public services had to be disproportionately born by private capital which resulted in a reduction in business profitability .
25 Where E(Y) is the expected income ( defined as earnings before interest and taxes ) , B is the market value of debt used by the company in its financial structure and k b is the rate of interest born by that debt .
26 The government contributed just eighteen point two percent so the bulk of our expenditure was born by local people directly .
27 If born by natural means , the subject 's entry into the UFO will never be imagined as by way of a bright explosion of light ; if born by surgical means , the entry will never be by transport along a tube or tunnel .
28 If born by natural means , the subject 's entry into the UFO will never be imagined as by way of a bright explosion of light ; if born by surgical means , the entry will never be by transport along a tube or tunnel .
29 This orientation can be characterised by certain basic attitudes , chief among which are ( 1 ) a continued and strict adherence to the tenets of Judaic law ; ( 2 ) a recognition of Jesus as Messiah in the original Judaic sense of the word ; ( 3 ) a repudiation of the Virgin Birth and an insistence on Jesus having been born by natural processes , without any divine intervention ; and ( 4 ) a militant hostility towards Paul and the edifice of Pauline thought .
30 A boy ( Isaac X ) was born by natural delivery .
  Next page