Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [to-vb] in [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 FCA of who had been found to be in breach of Investment Business Regulation 1.32 in that in Camberley between 6 October 1989 and 22 August 1991 the firm failed to carry out a review of its compliance procedures in accordance with the terms of the Regulation and having been in breach of Investment Business Regulation 2.09 in that in Camberley between 6 October 1989 and 22 August 1991 the firm failed to warn clients of the extent to which they may be exposed to risk in accordance with the terms of the Regulation and having been in breach of Investment Business Regulation 2.32 in that in Camberley between 6 October 1989 and 22 August 1991 , when the firm gave advice to clients such that , if acted upon , it would result in commission being received , it failed to inform those clients of that position in writing in accordance with the terms of the Regulation and having been in breach of Investment Business Regulation 2.47 in that in Camberley between 6 October 1989 and 22 August 1991 the firm failed to issue engagement letters in accordance with the terms of the Regulation and having been in breach of Investment Business Regulation 2.60 in that in Camberley between 6 October 1989 and 22 August 1991 the firm failed to ensure that it had adequate records in accordance with the terms of the Regulation was reprimanded , fined £500 and ordered to pay £250 by way of costs .
2 CRYSTAL PALACE may be struggling to keep in step with the rest of the Premier League but they were named yesterday as models of military efficency .
3 Mr Guest has been extremely helpful , first sending an inspector out to review the situation and then arranging for the 6.45am bus from Crook to Bishop Auckland to be rescheduled to arrive in Crook five minutes earlier .
4 The minimum period which a prisoner can be expected to serve in order to satisfy the requirements of retribution and deterrence has become known as the tariff period .
5 But Mr Patten — who would earn a tax-free salary of £140,000 — would be expected to remain in office until the handover in 1997 , taking him out of mainstream politics for five years .
6 If you can not reasonably be expected to vote in person on polling day you can apply for an absent vote .
7 While if a user is really looking for a system to support management decisions , how can he be expected to know in advance all the decisions which he will have to take ?
8 As this was the first time this had happened , how could we be expected to know in advance ?
9 Graduate lecture courses are few at present but may be expected to grow in number in the near future .
10 In these early stages of re-training , the horse can be expected to keep in rhythm while doing basic school movements , carrying himself on a light contact .
11 Clerical staff who may be required to input data into the system will be expected to train in order to use the system .
12 A variety of techniques will be used to chart their general beliefs about child development , as well as their specific estimates of what children of given ages might normally be expected to achieve in history .
13 In ‘ normal ’ times , these can be expected to rise in value , but the last five years have not been ‘ normal ’ .
14 Resistance may be expected to develop in turn to these variants .
15 Thus , the most a house insurer can be expected to provide in respect of an insurance below the Agreement threshold is confirmation that insurance arrangements were extant when the security was taken .
16 Eating quail 's eggs , he frowned as he reread the letter from Lloyd 's : it warned him of the amount that he would shortly be expected to produce in settlement .
17 The court ordered a commission of experts to be appointed by the Ministry of Health to rule on whether Zhivkov could be expected to appear in court again .
18 In 1348 they demanded free trade in wool , and in 1351 achieved a definitive victory when the king agreed that the maltote should be granted only in parliament and that all merchants should be permitted to deal in wool ‘ without being restricted by those merchants who call themselves the king 's merchants ’ .
19 Similar standards may be applied to lead in petrol .
20 Particular effort should be made to keep in touch with nurses who have left employment and who may be able to return at some future date .
21 Determined efforts should be made to keep in touch with the family , irrespective of the patient 's age , and to give practical advice .
22 Those journalists who recklessly write false stories deserve to be made to grovel in apology .
23 First , it meant that ‘ no man [ was ] punishable or [ could ] be made to suffer in body or goods except for a distinct breach of law established in the ordinary legal manner before the ordinary courts of the land ’ .
24 With more confidence , more people would be looking to invest in capital goods like office furniture , which could only help Project and its 450 Haverhill workforce , he said .
25 In the CO map of Fig. 4 b , several narrow bands of foreground clouds can be seen to cross in front of the broad emission from the centre .
26 The paint exchange scheme will shortly be expanded to take in paint waste from the trade sector in the city .
27 As long as expenditure can not be said to apply in support of specific candidates , national party campaigns do not fall foul of the election finance restrictions .
28 With such an advantage , British companies should be rushing to invest in training and capital equipment .
29 The client must then be persuaded to invest in change .
30 In the middle of the last century , a local landowner of rare imagination , Osgood Mackenzie , conceived the idea of transforming a barren and rocky promontory of Loch Ewe into a wild garden in which , blessed by the influence of the Gulf Stream , trees and shrubs would be persuaded to flourish in defiance of the harsh northern climate .
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