Example sentences of "[noun sg] put [prep] [det] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ ( 1 ) A person shall not be excused , by reason that to do so may incriminate that person or the wife or husband of that person of an offence under this Act — ( a ) from answering any question put to that person in proceedings for the recovery or administration of any property , for the execution of any trust or for an account of any property or dealings with property ; or ( b ) from complying with any order made in any such proceedings ; but no statement or admission made by a person in answering a question put or complying with an order made as aforesaid shall , in proceedings for an offence under this Act , be admissible in evidence against that person or ( unless they married after the making of the statement or admission ) against the wife or husband of that person . |
2 | ‘ ( 1 ) … a person shall not be excused , by reason that to do so would tend to expose that person , or his or her spouse , to proceedings for a related offence … ( a ) from answering any question put to that person in the first-mentioned proceedings ; or ( b ) from complying with any order made in those proceedings . |
3 | ‘ ( 1 ) In any proceedings to which this subsection applies a person shall not be excused , by reason that to do so would tend to expose that person , or his or her spouse , to proceedings for a related offence for the recovery of a related penalty — ( a ) from answering any question put to that person in the first-mentioned proceedings ; or ( b ) from complying with any order made in those proceedings . |
4 | ‘ ( 1 ) A person shall not be excused , by reason that to do so may incriminate that person or the wife or husband of that person of an offence under this Act — ( a ) from answering any question put to that person in proceedings for the recovery or administration of any property , for the execution of any trust or for an account of any property or dealings with property ; or ( b ) from complying with any order made in any such proceedings ; but no statement or admission made by a person in answering a question put or complying with an order made as aforesaid shall , in proceedings for an offence under this Act , be admissible in evidence against that person or ( unless they married after the making of the statement or admission ) against the wife or husband of that person . |
5 | With the question put in that way , a group of students mentioned ‘ the national government ’ , ‘ local government ’ , ‘ the EC ’ , ‘ transnational corporations ’ , ‘ capitalism ’ , ‘ the unions ’ , ‘ regional policy ’ , and ‘ the people themselves ’ . |
6 | David Batty , the combative Leeds and England midfielder , is anxious not to see all the hard work put in this term go unrewarded . |
7 | He forbade it : he would not have the child put in that position . |
8 | Nias argues that the description of what the primary teacher puts into that amalgam is incomplete " if it does not make room for potentially dangerous emotions such as love , rage and jealousy on the one hand and intermittent narcissism and outbreaks of possessive dependence on the other " . |
9 | As the Army collapsed in turmoil on 11 February , the White House Situation Room put through several calls to the US ambassador in Teheran , William Sullivan saying that Zbigniew Brezinski wanted to know what were the chances of a coup d'etat . |
10 | 2/I start putting in more detail . |
11 | In 1985 dredgers were busily raking up gravel from the shoals in the river to put into more gabions for bank reinforcement beside the Trannon . |
12 | The interpretation put on these results was that the latter may have an optimum level which facilitates creativeness ; though beyond that point — as seen in the seriously psychotic — it may hamper creativity . |
13 | Dr Clark 's jaw put on another yard . |
14 | We might have said no but that 's what it was because of pressure put on this side |
15 | ‘ Surely you remember what your researcher put in those notes , Fran ? |
16 | This is not to deny that plan-making is a very valuable function of our local authorities ; it is rather to point out that the existing powers to implement their plans are restricted by the price that the market puts on some land , and by the fact that the planners ' resource is in the hands of private owners rather than at the disposal of the community . |