Example sentences of "bear in [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The headhunter may well feel that there is a need to bring a more general consulting focus to bear in order to solve the organisational issues before an executive search is undertaken .
2 Where there was reluctance — as in Britain — middle-class pressure had to be brought to bear in order to convince the politicians that something ought to be done .
3 She went home that night having had to bring all her professionalism to bear in order to concentrate on the job in hand .
4 Dr Clarke brings powerful evidence to bear in support of his contention that 1931 marked a watershed in Keynes 's development .
5 Held , dismissing the appeal , that there was nothing in the policy of the Insolvency Act 1986 that indicated that Parliament intended to give the words ‘ carried on business ’ in section 265(1) ( c ) ( ii ) of that Act a meaning different from that which they had been held to bear in section 4(1) ( d ) of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 ; that a debtor did not cease to carry on business for the purposes of section 265(1) ( c ) ( ii ) until all the trading debts of the business had been paid ; and that , accordingly , the registrar had been right in holding that since the tax liability had not been discharged the debtor was still carrying on business and that he had jurisdiction to make the bankruptcy order ( post , pp. 122B–E , H — 123A ) .
6 You also need to bear in mind that you may have other payments under existing deeds of covenant or other payments made under Gift Aid in the same tax year , and you will need to have a taxable income at least equal to the gross amount of all these payment , as well as the Gift Aid payment being contemplated , otherwise you will have to account to the Revenue for some tax .
7 When considering the merit of this argument , one does have to bear in mind the particularly precarious nature of the Southern protestant grouping .
8 I suggest two points to bear in mind .
9 Concerning arrangement there are also , perhaps , two basics to bear in mind .
10 You see , when you are working in plan like this it is difficult to bear in mind that machine table heights can work in your favour and they can also work against you .
11 On the amount of damages , Mr Lightman said the Court of Appeal had a special responsibility to bear in mind the ‘ dangerous precedent ’ which could be set by such awards , and added that in this case the award was out of all proportion to the alleged libel .
12 There are a number of points to bear in mind .
13 There are plenty of people in the music business who would like it that way , but I have to bear in mind that people get ill , home-sick and miserable .
14 There are three points to bear in mind about 8-bit consoles .
15 Miss Ann Curnow , QC , for Danny Palmer , in mitigation asked the judge to bear in mind his desperately unhappy background .
16 Last night was one to bear in mind .
17 Another factor to bear in mind is that , unlike TL dating , radiocarbon is independent of the archaeological burial environment , provided that potential contaminants have been removed in the pretreatment process .
18 There are some very basic psychological principles for you to bear in mind .
19 She rose and the apron made a tissue-paper sound , ‘ And we have to bear in mind , Miss Thorne , that for many people a hospital of this kind is not the answer .
20 To appreciate the impact that O'Neill had on Ulster , it is important to bear in mind the power of symbols .
21 As well as these general considerations there are particular things to bear in mind when meeting with people of certain age groups .
22 ( We need to bear in mind that the voices of horses differ greatly between individuals ; so a mare or foal may actually possess a deep voice , and a stallion may sometimes have quite a high voice . )
23 You have to bear in mind that the occupation did not apply to Slovakia .
24 ‘ It is wise to bear in mind how vastly superior is the individual over all the political institutions and social mechanisms which oppress him ! ’
25 When questioned over the possibility of the EC issuing regulations ( which must be followed exactly ) as opposed to directives ( where the result must comply , but the means by which the result is obtained is not stipulated ) 0 , the DoE pointed out that although there was ‘ a greater certainty with regard to regulation ’ it was important to bear in mind that different countries have different administration regimes and that directly applicable regulations could , therefore , cause problems .
26 When planning objectives there are various management points to bear in mind and these will be outlined in the ensuing paragraphs .
27 But it is important to bear in mind that such misgivings are made privately .
28 Since citizenship has become a fashionable and acceptable word , it is easy to slip into the habit of using it in preference to ‘ individual rights ’ or ‘ human rights ’ , but it is important to bear in mind the desirability of keeping the private sphere of the life of the individual separate from his role as citizen , an essentially political role and status .
29 The key point to bear in mind is that , even if a faculty is granted , listed building consent is also required for demolition .
30 We need to bear in mind the wise counsel of Francis de Sales , the seventeenth-century Bishop of Geneva , when he dedicated his book , Introduction to the Devout Life , to his close friend Philothea :
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