Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [modal v] [vb infin] for " in BNC.

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1 Then the algorithm may opt for a particular child C on the basis of the gradient of f at N , but the gradient is misleading and in fact f ( C ) is much less then f(N) .
2 If Disneyland , which is only 150 acres in size , can attract 10 million visitors a year , the opportunity must exist for us to attract our own type of tourist .
3 To summarise , he felt that ( 1 ) a minority of mountain bike riders cause damage to the land and ( 2 ) that therefore you would be opposed to the idea of the path — ‘ the majority must suffer for the misbehaviour of a minority ’ .
4 The league says while the majority will suffer for the minority , it is not prepared to put an animal at risk .
5 Today they fly south to see a seventh-century Buddha statue and Buddhist temple before boarding a flight to Hong Kong , where the prince will stay for three days while the princess flies home .
6 Any party to the proceedings and any person named in the direction may apply for variation ( s38(8) ( b ) and FPCR , r2(1) ) .
7 In the case of rent and other payments of a periodic nature , the creditor may prove for any amounts due and unpaid up to the date of the bankruptcy order ( r 6.112(1) ) .
8 Where at that date , any payment was accruing due , ie where payment in arrears was stipulated , the creditor may prove for the amount which would have fallen due if the debt had accrued from day to day ( r 6.112(2) ) .
9 Always ready to look on the bright side she expected that the remission would last for a long time , and there was a conspiracy between Maureen and her mother to conceal Julia 's suffering from her .
10 The money would pay for everything anybody needed , but no-one had more than five or ten dollars in their pockets .
11 The entry of Britain into the Common Market in 1973 had given us access to a 10% repayment scheme of the Consolidated Fund , allowed under EEC rules , and it was from this source that the money would come for the expansion of the Customs fleet .
12 The money will pay for decontaminating test sites used by the British at Maralinga and Emu in South Australia in the 1950s .
13 The money will pay for a three year scheme to improve 334 houses and five bungalows on the 1960s built estate .
14 The money will pay for promotion material and prizes , as well as encouraging women to take up the sport .
15 In particular , programs using graphics or requiring additional software routines or hardware devices will be difficult in this respect , and the programmer must cater for any intended transfer from the outset by establishing common features such as a compatible screen grid-size and compatible device characteristics .
16 The computer can check for towns that are missed off signs , those that appear for no good reason or appear only intermittently , to the great confusion of amateur navigators .
17 Now the snake could go for Lollo .
18 If this is in the form of a loose box to which the cow can adapt for some days before calving , then there is inevitably less stress .
19 The contract will therefore seek : 1 to define the client 's obligations and , so far as possible , to minimise them ; 2 to define the scope of the contract by defining which statements form part of it ; 3 to minimise the scope for variation of the contract duties , by defining the authority of the client 's representatives to make statements binding on it , or to vary the contract ; 4 to minimise the likelihood of the client being in breach of contract , by defining the client 's obligations in flexible terms : for instance , the quantity of goods to be delivered may be subject to tolerances ; or the contract may provide for the time for delivery to be extended in certain situations ; 5 to minimise the extent of the client 's liability for any breach it commits : for instance , by excluding liability for certain kinds of loss , or by placing a financial ceiling on liability ; 6 to define the obligations of the client 's trading partners ; 7 to define the consequences of non-performance by the client 's trading partners ; 8 to provide machinery to encourage prompt performance by the client 's trading partners : for instance , a seller may require interest on late payments , or offer discounts for early payment ; a buyer may contract for the right to withhold payment until satisfactory performance ; 9 to allow the client to use procedurally simple enforcement methods : for instance , terms of sale should be drafted so as to allow the seller to bring a liquidated claim for the price of the goods ; 10 to provide the client with security against non-performance by its trading partners : thus terms of sale are likely to seek to provide the seller with security against non-payment , for instance by means of a retention of title clause ; terms of purchase will seek to minimise the buyer 's exposure by allowing some or all of the price to be retained against satisfactory performance .
20 Thus , if the allocation of risks under the Sale of Goods Act is uncertain , the contract can provide for foreseeable contingencies .
21 I just wonder whether the Chairman might ask for another verdict and then if that 's tied it will have to go up before Council . .
22 Accordingly , with effect from 1991 – 92 , a new procedure established under s86 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 operates whereby every practising certificate will specify a " replacement date " by which the holder must apply for its renewal .
23 In order to avoid being taken to have accepted a seller 's terms by accepting a delivery note , the buyer may arrange for its warehouse staff to acknowledge receipt of goods delivered by issuing a form referring to its own terms ; alternatively , it may stamp the seller 's delivery note with a receipt referring to its own terms , which may be effective to incorporate them if the stamp is legible .
24 If the seller of the French property is from the UK , then the buyer can arrange for the transaction to be in sterling , says Mr Barber .
25 For breach by the seller of any term of the contract , the buyer can sue for damages .
26 By this time the money involved would be £200,000 and the blackmail would run for two years .
27 DeVore laughed , knowing the drug would last for hours yet — would keep him at this peak until he had done with her .
28 It is worth remembering that even the highly efficient drugs currently available will not remove all the worms present ; that some cattle nematodes can infect sheep and vice versa ; and that a few infective larvae on the pasture can survive for beyond two years .
29 All students who have become temporary residents in Northern Ireland and have been accepted at the University should apply for a Medical Card through the University Health Centre .
30 The building will cater for art , sculpture , film , print-making , computer design and textiles .
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