Example sentences of "lend to [art] " in BNC.

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1 He was lent to a forester when he was a child . ’
2 On enquiry they were told that the other had been lent to a local restaurant when it suffered a power cut .
3 The £100,000 is lent to an underlying company or used to subscribe for share capital in the underlying company .
4 One of Titian 's most celebrated portraits , the ‘ Portrait of a Young Man ’ from the collection of the Earl of Halifax and the Trustees of the Halifax Collection has been lent to the Gallery for at least two years .
5 In December 1316 , Bertrand de Goth , vicomte of Lomagne and Auvillars , acting as Clement V 's executor , returned to Margaret of Béarn and the seven-year-old Gaston II a ‘ certain little knife ’ ( cultellum ) , which Gaston I of Foix had lent to the pope .
6 In the confusion , our film , which we had dutifully sent to the group 's London management as promised , got lent to the BBC .
7 When the state took over recruitment under the Military Service Acts , the party continued to be involved : many agents were transferred to the army , where they continued to do the same job , and many party offices were lent to the government as recruitment centres .
8 Some of the nicer touches are lent to the machine by the inclusion of a pretty hairy caching IDE hard disk controller , which , in the review machine , is complete with 4MB of RAM to cache the IDE hard drive .
9 The savings deposited in the NSB are called ‘ national savings ’ and are lent to the government .
10 If the trust has £50,000 of income in year 1 and £25,000 in year 2 and £10,000 in year 3 and in year 1 £80,000 is lent to the settlor by the trust ( a capital sum includes an amount paid by way of loan — see below ) then in year 1 the settlor would be taxed on £50,000 , in year 2 on £25,000 and in year 3 on £5,000 .
11 Thus if the Ming Vase is lent to the taxpayer repayable on demand ( so to say ) then if the taxpayer does in fact have the use for the entire year then the type of rental likely to be charged on such a letting in the market ( duly discounted because the trustees can call back the vase on demand ) is likely to comprise the benefit under s740 .
12 One of the Chevron 's strong points is that it is a good-looker , with a handsome profile and modern-looking cockpit. the futuristic wing doors make for easy access and lend to the aircraft 's attractive appearance .
13 A society has no ‘ owners ’ but has ‘ members ’ who lend to the society by buying shares which are in effect deposits .
14 They borrow from the banks for as little as a few hours ' notice of recall by the banks ( money at call ) , and lend to the government , local authorities and firms for typically three months ( bills of exchange ) .
15 In a statement issued in Bonn , he stressed ‘ the importance that Western countries lend to the continuation of the reform process that President Yeltsin has represented for the past one and a half years ’ .
16 They lend to an airport lounge the look of a grotesque , sprawling creche peopled by monster babies .
17 Some years ago we lent to a colleague a memory-training book with a very attractive title , which implied that after studying the book the reader would have a superb memory for all occasions .
18 Any photographs lent to the Society will be returned in due course .
19 Dealers such as Jean Gismondi of Paris were unstinting in their praise of the chic it lent to the event .
20 Professor Dietz estimates the total cost of the wages and equipment of these armies at £892,000 , to which should be added about £20,000 , lent to the Emperor Maximilian .
21 Those who lent to the turnpike trusts were even more localised than those who bought canal stock .
22 A debenture is a document issued by a company in exchange for money lent to the company .
23 The most liquid of the market loans are money at call and short notice lent to the discount houses .
24 The result of the survey was ‘ a remarkably even split between managers who were prepared to help and lend to the proprietors and those who were not prepared to do so ’ .
25 In this case it may lend to the discount houses ; then the Bank 's balance sheet will show an increase in advances ( an asset ) and in bankers ' deposits ( a liability ) .
26 First , the Bank can lend to the discount houses as a method of providing further assistance if it has not provided adequate assistance earlier in the day .
27 In such circumstances ( known as ‘ the last resort ’ ) the Bank of England will always step in and lend to the discount houses , or purchase bills of exchange from them before the bills have reached maturity .
28 This too was the rate at which the Bank of England would lend to the discount houses in the last resort .
29 The down-side is that the critic 's representation of the text has none of the authority that objectivity would lend to the analysis .
30 A return for loss of use of the money is still required and if no return were made then buyers would not lend to the government and would lend elsewhere , for example .
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