Example sentences of "[prep] [noun] made by the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We , therefore , provide an outline of the Queen 's Bench Division procedure , indicating the changes that have taken place and specific recommendations for change made by the Review .
2 Sales vouchers for payment made by the bank credit cards such as Access and Barclaycard are treated as cash .
3 The Jubilee was celebrated by a District Rally held at the Guildhall in Cambridge and reflected the wide support the WEA continued to attract through speeches made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer ( R. A. Butler ) , the Provost of King 's College ( Sir John Sheppard ) , the Director of Education for Norfolk ( Dr. Lincoln Ralphs ) , the National Secretary of the WEA ( Harry Nutt ) and the former Chairman of the District ( Arthur Allen , MP for Wellingborough ) .
4 It was here that the Princess was presented with a bonnet of straw-plait made by the ladies of Swanage who stayed up all night to finish it before the royal party left next day from the Quay to join the Royal Yacht in the Bay .
5 The additional exercises certainly led to a greater use of patterns made by the dancers rolling or posturing over and on the floor .
6 appraisal of circumstances possibly leading to a mitigation of sentence made by the Recorder , principal residing judge at the old Sessions House ( now the Central Criminal Court ) after the Lord Chief Justice .
7 There was a groan from the darkness , and Alex Bannen stumbled into the splash of light made by the torches .
8 This was because of the number of concessions made by the Minister , who on the whole gave a sympathetic response to many of the concerns expressed by members .
9 The impact of the section has been very broadly based in the city , and for the first time we 've added for you in very brief terms , a Domiciliary Health information of just the total number of visits made by the city health care , erm and the level of work in terms of notices served , and prosecutions , note , going up in most of the sections , particularly their units they 're small numbers , but they are significant , just the same , and the table on the top of page forty-four , erm as I said earlier , I think we reached the highest level of insect complaints in the summer that we 've ever had to deal with , it 's very usual for us to deal with a thousand , over in the summer period , this time we dealt with sixteen hundred .
10 The main thrust of the interesting critique of Formalism made by the Bakhtin school ( discussed below in the chapter on Marxism ) is based on the claim that all use of language , including a literary use , is both social and ideological .
11 The figures are thought to have been adapted from a cycle of statues made by the sculptor Lysippus for a sanctuary at Alezia ( Acarnania , Greece ) in the 4th century BC and later brought to Rome .
12 Both these methods leave very characteristic helical seams which can be seen on examples of wires made by the two methods in Figure 8.6a and b , taken from genuine antiquities .
13 Secondly , this is not a case where the tax was paid under a mistake of law made by the payer and the revenue thus can not , and does not , rely on the authorities which rule that a claim for money had and received does not lie where it was paid under a mistake of law .
14 Since we are satisfied that by the operation of the Judicature Act 1873 and its successor statutes High Court judges are sitting as the High Court when they exercise their jurisdiction as visitors to the Inns of Court in disciplinary matters , there is nothing in Lord Diplock 's speech in that case which derogates from the proposition that they are not susceptible to judicial review , which is available , as Lord Diplock said , at p. 384 , as a remedy for mistakes of law made by inferior courts and tribunals only , and not for mistakes of law made by the High Court itself .
15 As to illegality , recent developments in the law have shown that any relevant error of law made by the decision maker , whether as to his powers or as to the law he is to apply , may lead to his decision being quashed .
16 In my judgment , therefore , if there were a statutory provision that the decision of a visitor on the law applicable to internal disputes of a charity was to be ‘ final and conclusive , ’ courts would have no jurisdiction to review the visitor 's decision on the grounds of error of law made by the visitor within his jurisdiction ( in the narrow sense ) .
17 This was not , however , immediately apparent to those photographers , instrument makers and lanternists who had been fired up to experiment with moving pictures after hearing reports of Edison 's Kinetoscope , the original what-the-butler-saw machine , or witnessing the first projection of films made by the Lumière Brothers in 1896 .
18 The Action Programme declares the Commissioner 's intention of making maximum use of contributions made by the Foundation whose work programmes have already included issues such as hazardous wastes , contaminated land , and voluntary initiatives in the environment . ’
19 The preservation of the principle of ‘ insurance ’ was a clear throw-back to the days of Lloyd George and , as he explained in a radio broadcast , his ‘ Plan for Britain' was ‘ based on the contributory principle of giving not free allowances to all from the State , but giving benefits as of right in virtue of contributions made by the insured persons themselves ’ .
20 The Record Offices of these counties possess a considerable number of awards made by the commissioners , often accompanied by a map showing the new lay-out of the parish , with the fields and roads marked out pretty much as we know them today .
21 As such , the analysis lacks the constitutional authority of awards made by the Court of Appeal which , as Lord Diplock stated in Wright v British Railways Board [ 1983 ] AC 773 at p785 is " the tribunal best qualified to set the guidelines for Judges currently trying such actions " .
22 The building — called the Old Manor House — was allegedly the scene of a naked ‘ wedding ceremony ’ and Miss Dale has also been at the centre of a storm surrounding payments of £4,000 made by the Treasury to help fund Chancellor Norman Lamont 's legal expenses to get her out of his London house .
23 The relationship between the personal representatives of a deceased partner and the trustee of a bankrupt partner and the continuing partners is considered further in Chapter 8. ( b ) Under the Solicitors ' Act Much of the work of a solicitor is now the subject of regulations made by the Law Society under the Solicitors ' Act .
24 The arguments surrounding the issue , important in assessing Thom 's work , were also vital to an investigation of gold-weights made by the Ashanti people of Ghana .
25 This Act was quickly passed following comments made by the Auditor General in his report for the fiscal year ended 31 March 1976 In that report the Auditor General had declared that ( p. 9 ) :
26 These differences could obviously prove useful in identifying batches of paper made by the same mould .
27 In triable either way cases magistrates have first to decide which venue would be more appropriate for trial of the offence , in the light of representations made by the prosecutor and the defence .
28 But , in general , it would be for the third party surety to satisfy itself whether or not it should enter into the bond and to satisfy itself about the accuracy of representations made by the debtor .
29 Most of the studies will involve volunteer trainee GPs who will try out a variety of mutually agreed upon strategies designed to increase the frequency of signs indicating that patients are making active checks on their understanding and acceptance of suggestions made by the doctor .
30 This problem is currently being aggravated by the level of charges made by the Institute for conferences and publications .
  Next page