Example sentences of "[vb pp] to [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 For example , should the member believe that the issue may be sufficiently important to be disclosed to the relevant authorities in the ‘ public interest ’ , then the chance to talk through the matter can be helpful .
2 These are as follows : ( 1 ) When the pleadings are deemed to be closed ; ( a ) there shall be discovery of documents within 28 days , and inspection within seven days thereafter , in accordance with para ( 5 ) ; ( b ) except with the leave of the court or where all parties agree ; ( i ) no expert evidence may be adduced at the trial unless the substance of that evidence has been disclosed to the other parties in the form of a written report within ten weeks ; and ( ii ) subject to para ( 7 ) , the number of expert witnesses of any kind shall be limited to two ; ( c ) photographs and sketch plans and , in an action for personal injuries , the contents of any police accident report book shall be receivable in evidence at the trial and shall be agreed if possible ; ( d ) unless a day has already been fixed , the plaintiff shall within six months request the proper officer to fix a day for the hearing and r 12 shall apply where such request is made .
3 By the end of 1996 , therefore , we will have to ensure that all of our equipment meets EC standards , and that we have acquired furniture designed to the approved specifications .
4 They are entitled to do that in a free European democracy , but we are entitled to hold our ground and to argue that we as a nation were never committed to a united states of Europe in 1973 , that we are not committed to it now and that we do not intend to pre-empt that decision .
5 Currently the Labour Party in Scotland is committed to no nuclear weapons on our soil , but shadow Chancellor Gordon Brown has given a firm commitment to Rosyth Dockyard for the refitting of Trident submarines .
6 That is why the Government are committed to an expanded roads programme and continuing major investment in our transport infrastructure .
7 Negotiations with the landlords regarding a reduction of their rent demand of £100,000 per annum have been unsuccessful , and had we not used this break clause we would have been committed to the new conditions of the lease way into the twenty-first century .
8 Net Trust is a movement of Christians committed to the following purposes :
9 We have been robust in dealing with planning applications in green belt areas , and we are wholly committed to the five objectives of the green belt .
10 A good headteacher ( and chair of governors ) in this conception is a person ( usually a man ) who is not only committed to the above ideals but can also see ways of circumventing any constraints upon this style placed by ‘ outside interference ’ such as the advice of the LEA and/or the teacher unions/staff representatives .
11 Liberal Democrats remain steadfastly committed to the original aims of the NHS : to enable everyone to live free of the fear of illness , injury and disability ; to provide health care free at the point of delivery and regardless of ability to pay .
12 Group directors and national directors were committed to the same goals .
13 Thus , despite the fact , that WFP will require a substantial input of accounting resources these will be largely committed to the bureaucratic tasks of co-ordinating transactions between A and B. Given particularly the government 's record in the early 1980's of denouncing the ‘ excessive , administrative costs of the NHS , that seems incredible .
14 Mr Williams said the condition of the plant at Torness does credit to SNL and shows the management and staff are clearly committed to the high standards demanded of the nuclear industry .
15 The latter , represented by people like Yves Congar , Henri de Lubac and Louis Bouyer , appealed away from the post-medieval neo-scholastic synthesis of contemporary official Catholic theology to a far more creative use of biblical and patristic sources ; it accepted the rightness of part of the classical Protestant critique of Roman Catholicism ; it fully adhered to the highest standards of modern scholarship , but in a really quite traditional way .
16 She had religiously adhered to the white squares .
17 This was a police matter , and such information should only be divulged to the legal teams , and possibly to the families , she said .
18 Visit the area several times and you will find yourself being attracted to a few sites in particular : these are the places where you can meet the earth spirit .
19 The birds , in particular albatrosses , are attracted to the baited hooks which are used for long-line fishing , and become caught in the nets and killed ; , Further restrictions are to be imposed on the establishment up of new fisheries in the area .
20 Many young notables were attracted to the new ideologies then current in the Arab world , notably the Communist Party ( the only party of any significance to have opposed the erasure of ‘ Palestine ’ from the Jordanian maps ) , and the Ba'ath .
21 But once again the money ran out before sufficient audiences could be attracted to the new policies of temperance and self-improvement , and in 1884 it was the millionaire textile manufacturer and Liberal MP , Samuel Morley [ q.v. ] , who came to the rescue of Emma and her theatre with interim funding , which led eventually to support from the charity commissioners and other private sponsorship with which , in 1891 , Emma Cons was able to buy the freehold of the theatre and dedicate it to musical and other entertainments of an uplifting or educational nature .
22 A precociously bright boy , he was attracted to the intellectual aspects of the game , as well as the physical participation in it .
23 The ant parts used to paint women 's faces in the maize festival are from the ants that are attracted to the extrafloral nectaries of cassava and keep insects off the beans that are trained up the more robust maize .
24 Thereafter , individuals attracted to the different units have different goals which reinforce the imbalance .
25 The Crown accepted that the income of the settlement arose or accrued to the three trustees jointly and not jointly and severally so that none of them was entitled , in law , separately to any particular share or fraction of the income .
26 In the towns they drink wine and liqueurs , but we ca n't do that in the villages … the result is that the gents can drink , but it 's forbidden to the lower classes . ’
27 The track gradually dropped to the rippling waters of the Hongu Khola , where we made camp on the banks of the river amidst azaleas and fragrang scrub juniper between the enclosing mountains .
28 The Accounting Standards Board responded to the increasing demands for improvement in the way in which financial performance is reported and in April 1991 published a discussion draft putting forward its proposals .
29 It seems reasonable to infer from the above that numerous corporate executives , having already responded to the situational demands necessary for career mobility within an organization by displaying sufficient degrees of competitive ambition , shrewdness , and moral flexibility will experience a further development of these characteristics when they have to respond to the relatively unaccountable and unconstrained power of being at or near the top of a large national , but especially transnational corporation .
30 That was not so on the men 's tour , which means it would be very much easier for the ITF to set up its own women 's tour linking many of the principal regular events such as Berlin , Eastbourne , Brighton etc , with the Grand Slams , than it would have been had they responded to the many appeals they had at the time to set up a men 's circuit in competition with ATP …
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