Example sentences of "[to-vb] [art] [noun] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Furthermore , if such an event occurred , everyone recognized that the PLO would be under intense external pressure to sacrifice the refugee right of return .
2 The Home Unions have steadfastly refused to alter the timing of the tour to accommodate the Wallaby tour to South Africa and have also denied the ARU 's request to permit the Wallabies to tour South Africa prior to arriving in Ireland and Scotland .
3 Dig a hole wide and deep enough to accommodate the root system without undue bending and fill it with water .
4 Both government and landlords continued to uphold the village commune as a convenient instrument for apportioning tax , labour dues , and , in many areas , allotments of land .
5 Both organisations will be allowed to canvass tenants and stage public meetings in an attempt to swing the ballot vote in their favour .
6 To enable the cleaning-up operation to be carried out , the hospital will not accept casualty out-patients for the next few days .
7 Sir Robert Walpole summed up the motives which had persuaded the government to enable the debt transfer by the South Sea Act ( 6 George I c. 4 ) of 1720 .
8 By a notice of appeal dated 20 May 1992 the health authority appealed on the grounds that ( 1 ) the court had no jurisdiction to grant a mandatory injunction requiring a health authority to cause specified medical treatment to be given , alternatively , no jurisdiction to order it to cause such treatment to be given against the professional judgment of its servants or agents ; ( 2 ) the judge had erred in holding that he was not bound by the decision in In re J. ( A Minor ) ( Wardship : Medical Treatment ) [ 1991 ] Fam. 33 to hold that there was no such jurisdiction ; ( 3 ) there had been no material before the court to justify the judge granting a mandatory interlocutory injunction since ( a ) there was no evidence that the health authority owed J. any enforceable duty to provide the ordered treatment , or that such treatment would be in his best interests ; ( b ) there was uncontradicted evidence before the court that the treatment ordered would be painful and ineffective to give J. a prospect of long term survival and ( c ) there was no material establishing that there was a reasonable or any prospect of a final order being granted in the terms of the interlocutory order ; ( 4 ) if the court had jurisdiction to make the order the judge erred in the exercise of his discretion in that ( a ) he had failed to give sufficient weight to the uncontradicted medical evidence or to the undesirability of seeking to force a doctor to act against his professional judgment and/or requiring the employer of the doctor to do so , ( b ) he had failed to consider that the order was capable of interfering with the health authority 's duty to care for other patients , and ( c ) by its terms the order was too imprecise to enable the health authority to be able to ascertain how it should be complied with .
9 Methods used , described in sufficient detail to enable the research programme to be repeated , possibly elsewhere .
10 At this meeting a major publication presenting the results of Phase I of the project was released , and it was announced that ODA would provide further funding to enable the project area to be extended northwards to Lake Turkana .
11 Further work has now been carried out on these Sections and this report contains proposals for the Control and Collection Sections to enable the recruitment process for Council staff to be carried out in good time .
12 Much work has been done and formulae developed to enable the dilution effect of chimney height to be calculated .
13 Also staff working in leisure areas , such as swimming pools or fitness rooms , sometimes have two-way radios in order to alert the reception desk in the event of an accident or call for assistance .
14 The list is presented mainly to alert the design team to the many dimensions that it is possible to work in .
15 But I had decided that I was n't going to wear the arrow suit for Truro Daine .
16 Yet by then it had gained the distinction — shared only with Guynemer 's squadron of the Cigognes — of being entitled to wear the shoulder lanyard of a twice cited unit .
17 TSB 's public affairs manager Laura O'Connell had a straight answer for the choice of a fictional team to wear the TSB logo on their shirts .
18 But if Lewis wants to wear the WBC crown with pride , he must set himself aside from Riddick Bowe 's yellow-bellied tactics .
19 Added to which they all tend to wear the regulation uniform in class , complete with cap very often , so that and I stand out conspicuously in our light coloured and variegated clothes .
20 They ruled over Rodez as counts Dei gratia and claimed the right to wear the iron crown of Rouergue .
21 the boy joined a Communist youth group , became more masculine and energetic , and participated in protest marches and picketing and even dared to wear the party button in school .
22 The Olympians had slightly further to swim , and while the juniors were allowed to crawl Moorhouse was made to swim the breast stroke at which he won gold at Seoul 5 years ago .
23 So , in an attempt to prompt the Home Office into more immediate action the Strongs have written to their MP Michael Heseltine .
24 She hopes in future it will be possible to restore the word nigger without stirring up racial tensions .
25 Cider vinegar is included in all the recipes to restore the acid/alkali balance of the scalp .
26 Louis Gerstner , the new head of IBM , told aggrieved shareholders he would do everything to restore the computer giant to health .
27 Ministers agreed to maintain the overall production ceiling set in March at 22,300,000 barrels per day ( bpd ) [ see p. 38122 ] despite attempts by some members to cut output further in order to restore the reference price of US$21 per barrel .
28 The US is buying up the salmon fishing rights of Greenland 's fishing industry in an attempt to restore the salmon population of its own rivers .
29 This was symbolized by the doomed attempt to restore the gold standard at pre-war parity as the basis of economic policy , which necessitated vigorous deflation to ensure financial rectitude in the altered conditions of the post-war world .
30 So the membrane then hyperpolarizes , but the stimulus is still present , and that 's tending to lead to a depolarization , so we get then this circle of membrane depolarization followed by hyperpolarization , but it 's the calcium activated K channels which are tending to restore the membrane potential to negative values .
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