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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Outlook , page 21 Bond remains with BSB : Alan Bond , the troubled Australian entrepreneur , is to pay the £27.5m required to remain part of the consortium behind British Satellite Broadcasting , the UK rival to Rupert Murdoch 's Sky Television .
2 ALAN BOND , the troubled Australian entrepreneur , will pay the £27.5m he must find to remain part of the consortium behind British Satellite Broadcasting , the UK rival to Rupert Murdoch 's Sky Television .
3 The first is to allow individuals to act alone in planning their own lives ; people should be allowed to capitalize part of the value of their national insurance benefits .
4 The rules governing national insurance premiums and child benefit should be changed so that people in clearly defined circumstances have the right to capitalize part of the value of these two state benefits .
5 Funds from the IMF and the World Bank , needed by the government to provide part of the collateral , would also be jeopardized if Brazil missed a second consecutive set of quarterly targets under its IMF-approved economic programme [ see pp. 38719-20 for terms of January IMF agreement ] .
6 Candidates should note that some degree curricula include travel requirements and that students will be expected to bear part of the cost of their travel programmes .
7 Furthermore , it was difficult both to secure part of the surplus from self-supporting peasant households ( with a rather low participation in any monetary economy ) and to do so on a fair basis , that is , one which did not provoke revolt .
8 It was agreed at an early stage ( principally at Citrine 's insistence ) that sales in urban and rural areas should be at common prices , so that many rural dwellers already having a supply had prices reduced , though new consumers distant from the mains still had to pay a one-off contribution or line rental ( which varied according to the Board ) to meet part of the cost of connection .
9 The generation of power from nuclear fission , generating intense radioactivity , has been developed and used commercially for several decades to meet part of the world demand for electrical energy .
10 Before leaving TM , Christians need to accept part of the blame for its popularity .
11 Lean-burn units use a pre-chamber ( top ) to concentrate part of the fuel charge for fast ignition by conventional plug , then the bulk of fuel is burnt very cleanly in excess air below .
12 Whether he come from this or not , but erm we were dredging the West Bank cos er the kind of ship we got there then were the big tankers and there were n't enough room for them to swing round , so we had to dredge part of the bank out to make the swinging berth and erm there we dredged a bone up about that size
13 I will move that the petition containing some one thousand one hundred and nine signatures as of , as of today , erm of people who call upon the county council to reverse its decision to sell part of the land known as The Green , Doddington Heath in my ward for development purposes .
14 It gave Anna real pain to post magazines through one new front door hinged and studded so as to resemble part of the set for a pantomime of Robin Hood , and then another , moulded and classically pedimented , between half-pilasters made of fibreglass .
15 One patch travels southwest to eliminate part of the flux lobe 3 while the other is carried west along the Equator to rest at the Pacific rim , near 90°W .
16 This army arrived too late , and stopping only to destroy part of the Chaos Army 's rearguard , quickly turned back south in pursuit of the main Chaos force .
17 IRELAND 'S South Donegal Railway Restoration Society received a major boost in its efforts to reopen part of the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee 's narrow gauge system when it took possession of two of the railway 's few surviving passenger vehicles .
18 Returning to McClellan , he also touches on the problem of titles which are so popular that they are constantly in circulation and therefore rarely available on the shelves to constitute part of the choice available to readers .
19 She was a tall , strongly-built divorcee who aimed to walk part of the Coast to Coast route as a holiday , like most of the other thousands who trek the walk each year .
20 How does the bird manage to identify part of the scene as a fish , or as food , in the first place , and how is it thereupon led to take appropriate action ( that is , how does it know that it should dive , irrespective of how steep the dive should be ) ?
21 I was actually quite thrilled about this , relishing the prospect of these old guard bastards curiously metamorphosing to look part of the present .
22 Just a brief run , enough to draw part of the defence towards the spot , and over it went with almost amazing accuracy to the other side of the field .
23 This makes good sense , as a headline is largely a device to put part of the message across and lure the reader into reading the rest .
24 Proposals to suppress unnecessary offices , to fund part of the state debt and to debase the currency , all had to face stubborn resistance .
25 The government has not always fully funded the nationally agreed pay awards , leaving health authorities to fund part of the increase from existing budgets .
26 The devaluation of the pound sterling in September 1992 , however , helped the Division to offset part of the dollar revenue shortfall .
27 The right hon. Gentleman already had to allocate more than £10 million to offset part of the cost of implementing the council tax in Wales .
28 Typically , discussion of a client 's tax affairs will lead naturally into consideration of investment options , such as pensions , which might be used to offset part of the tax liability .
29 As it was difficult to convert the square-ended chancel into living accommodation and it was felt important to retain part of the church in its original state , this area was left almost untouched in order to operate as a multi-purpose ‘ community room ’ .
30 Three main reasons were given for the apparent lack of enthusiasm : board members found it difficult to spare additional time for this form of training ; they were doubtful of the ability of outside trainers to provide training in tune with local needs ; attempts by some education authorities to retain part of the training budget in order to supply such area sessions were seen by some members as demonstrating a lack of trust in the board 's ability to organise its own training .
  Next page