Example sentences of "deal with [pos pn] " in BNC.

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1 By 8am she 's in her office as Pro-Vice-Chancellor and with her secretary Pauline Jennings deals with her correspondence between 8 and 9am .
2 Or does somebody else get the credit f or does the credit apply equally because everybody deals with their own at home ?
3 In particular they agreed that they had entered into private compensation deals with their larger investors , in contravention of a voluntary self-regulation agreement imposed by the government in December 1989 after the Recruit scandal [ for which see pp. 36463-64 ; 36589 ] , paying a total of 43,500 million yen ( about US$315,000,000 ) to 78 clients between March 1990 and March 1991 , to make up for trading losses resulting from their investment advice .
4 If the last chapter dealt with the freedom of form of the trust , this one deals with its freedom from formulae : forms of action were not promulgated in advance , as had been done in the edict of the urban praetor .
5 The above efficient gains from decentralization arise as government deals with its allocative functions .
6 Later rather than sooner a real live girl deals with your call in person .
7 So got a special pass because you 're a firearms officer which is essentially deals with your authorisation to have a gun and reminds you of the law .
8 He has published a second volume of autobiography , in which he deals with his years as a student at Oxford before and after the world war , and is now bursar of one of the colleges there .
9 This sequel to the author 's ‘ Nightmare Towards the Path ’ deals with his experiences while with the Desert Air Force in WWII .
10 Mr Day was threatened with an injunction last year when he completed the final draft of his book , most of which deals with his career in the Royal Marines and as a civil servant during the Emergency in Malaya .
11 In other words , the World Bank 's figures were bogus , but what mattered was that they provided welcome fodder to those who were already convinced of the value of Ceauşescu 's friendship and wished to promote further deals with his regime .
12 Jesus had had many interviews with people , we 've looked at some of them over these past few weeks , the time when he met with Nicademus , the religious leader , the time he went out of his way to meet with a woman of Semaria in her dyer need , the other occasion that we looked at er a week or so back when he called Anzakias from that tree of which he was hiding , last week his judge , pilot , but of all those interviews and as many others that we have n't looked at this surely must be one of the strangest as Jesus himself is in the process of dying and as he is dying he is confronted with another person who has a need , but Jesus your need is as greatest as any body elses , your pain , your suffering , your physical suffering was every bit of great as those around you , why be bothered with others is n't that so often our story , when we are in need we can forget all about other people , it does n't matter there need , its poor me , what about me , what about my need , what about my requirements , what about my suffering , but we see here how Jesus apart from any thing else deals with his own suffering , he deals with it by ministering to the needs of other people , and this surely then must be one of the most strange and one of the most interviews that our lord ever had when he was here on earth , with this dying thief , but he was more than a thief he was a er , he was a re a rebel , he was a terrorist or a freedom fighter depending on which way you wanted to look at it and he was dying for his crimes and he was n't alone because there there was this man we 've been talking about , there was Jesus and there was another one , another criminal on the other side and we find that this is all in keeping with what god had promised , all there in , in line with his prophecy way back in Iziah chapter fifty three , it tells us that he was numbered with the transgressors , that he died with sinful men with , with law breakers and here it is its happening right in front of the , the very eyes of the Jewish leaders and the jewish authorities our lords intention in coming into the world was to save men and women , to seek out and to save sinners , remember thirty odd years previous to this event the word had come , for Mary his mother , to Joseph , we will call his name Jesus because he will save his people from their sins and later on writing to Timothy the apostle Paul in the first chapter of the first book in verse fifteen he says it is a trust worthy statement deserving full acceptance that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners , this was his purpose , this was his reason for coming into the world , not to be a good man , not to be a , a great leader , not to give us some model that we can , you know , that we can plan our life out and try and live up to his standards , he says I 've come to give my life as a ransom , I have come to save and to seek that which was lost and here in this incident as he himself is dying and is in physical pain and torment he is carrying out this very work , of seeking out and saving of those who will turn to him , those who will put their trust in him , he is saving the lost , and we see in a wonderful how great the compassion of Jesus was and is , in reaching out and rescuing those who are lost , here we see our lord suffering the most terrible agony and yet in the midst of his own sorrow and pain and , and torment he thinks of this dying thief and extends his grace and mercy to him .
13 One to deal with its mathematical , one with its philosophical and psychoanalytic , one with its artistic implications .
14 Living with localism and the drift to an authoritarian system created a dangerous impasse in Zambian society , and left it singularly ill-equipped to deal with its economic collapse in the late 1980s .
15 Instead of looking for new approaches that could galvanize the industry to deal with its problems , the call went up for a leader who would , in the words of one Bioscope editorial , be able ‘ to make order out of disorder , to organize agreement and concord with a strong hand , tactfully and helpfully , yet with a stern repression of pettiness and ignoble motives . ’ .
16 After this initial time of taking in the news and trying to deal with its implications comes a time of absorbing the message given and trying to act on it .
17 The tower is fully let , leading to speculation that funds were diverted to deal with its liquidity crunch .
18 Also , the USA exported its long experience with trying to deal with its own soil erosion problems , as a part of foreign policy to its sphere of influence in Latin America in the 1950s , where there had been an almost complete lack of government concern over soil erosion .
19 A bank with a Luxembourg branch holding euro-DM deposits will instruct its correspondent bank in West Germany on how to deal with its DM nostro account balance , as the euro-DM deposit is loaned to another bank or non-bank borrower for use ( for an explanation of the euro-currency loan market and diagrammatic treatment of such transactions see 5.4.1 ) .
20 Europe is now rich enough to deal with its tribal , idiotic hatreds and appallingly violent racism on its own .
21 Even the USA , which in the 1980s still seemed sufficiently vast and dominant to deal with its economic problems without taking any notice of anyone else , at the end of that decade became aware that it ‘ had ceded considerable control over its economy to foreign investors … ( who ) now hold the power to help keep the US economy growing , or to help plunge it into recession ’ ( The Wall Street Journal , December 5 , 1988 , p1 ) .
22 Appeals to the House of Lords are heard by the Appellate Committee of the House , which consists of those members of the House qualified to deal with its judicial business .
23 But the United Kingdom Government held that , as a matter of law , each Allied government was entitled to deal with its nationals in its own way , and that the 1929 Geneva Convention on Prisoners of War did not protect any allied national who had served the enemy against his own government .
24 They made no bones about the Standard 's intention to establish minimum rates and to deal with its members ' grievances on such issues as ballast-heaving while at sea .
25 To deal with its rapidly increasing commuter traffic , in 1855 Adams introduced new high-capacity suburban trains with continuous brakes , probably the first in Britain .
26 To preclude a charge from being a floating charge , the restriction must substantially deprive the company of the power to deal with its assets in the normal course of business .
27 Such restrictions , which are quite common but strictly construed , limit the company 's actual authority to deal with its assets and accordingly remove the basis on which floating charges are postponed to later charges .
28 ‘ The council does not recognise dyslexia and does not have teachers trained to deal with its problems . ’
29 The CHAMPS installation will certainly meet that aim , and the interface of all its facilities allows us to manage the hotel while enabling guests to deal with their affairs in a quick and effective manner . ’
30 Plus a backdrop of houses covering the valley walls on either side , a reminder that wherever industrialised societies decide to deal with their most intractable problems , they are unlikely to find a place to do so which is not in somebody 's back yard .
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