Example sentences of "[be] [vb pp] [prep] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The too simple glacio-eustatic view of a descending series of old marine terraces being associated with interglacial high sea levels needs to be guarded against in areas such as East Anglia , where differential warping of the land may well have occurred .
2 I shall draw up a rota of ministers , each of whom is to be referred to in turn as ‘ the next leader of the Tory Party ’ , thus destroying their careers .
3 Rather , science ( and maybe even social science and other forms of discourse , such as that embodied in ordinary talk of mind and morality ) is the source of the substantive conceptions of reality which must be referred to in discussions of the possibility of knowledge .
4 Overall a useful book , but it should not be read in isolation , and other texts should be referred to in order to supplement its deficiencies .
5 Where the plan is subordinate to the verbal description it may be referred to in order to elucidate boundaries , so long as it does not conflict with anything explicit in the verbal description ( Wiggington & Milner v Winster Engineering [ 1978 ] 3 All ER 436 ) .
6 Often in money market reports as published in the Financial Times trade bills or commercial bills will be referred to in relation to purchases by the Bank of England .
7 This Article is still being considered and the subject will be referred to in detail in Chapter 9 .
8 Propitious curriculum developments , which will be referred to in detail later , included the restructuring of the lower-school IS curriculum to achieve more primary/secondary continuity and more project-based learning , and regular library-based learning activities pioneered by the science department .
9 We are suggesting the establishment of what might be referred to in shorthand as " Ofbus " , along the lines of Oftel and Ofgas .
10 Held , dismissing the appeal , that the liability imposed under section 1(1) of the Act of 1978 was intended by Parliament , by virtue of section 6(1) of the Act , to enable claims for contribution to be made as between parties who had no claim for contribution under the general law , and applied whenever a plaintiff had a cause of action against a third party in respect of the same damage as gave rise to his cause of action against the defendant , irrespective of the legal basis of the liability ; and that , accordingly , the defence of ex turpi causa non oritur actio could not be relied upon in answer to a claim for contribution under the Act ; and that , since there was sufficient possibility of the third party being found liable for some part of the plaintiffs ' loss , there were no grounds for striking out the third party notice ( post , pp. 1022H — 1023A , G–H , 1024G — 1025D ) .
11 It would add to the gaiety of nations although many , including Joshua Morris , discounted the possibility of Norm 's intervention , believing that Sir Charles Webb-Bowen 's myopia could be relied upon in emergencies .
12 That is because it demonstrates how poorly British farmers co-operate to sell their products — I hope that my right hon. Friend 's marketing grants will assist with that problem — and spells out in words of one syllable that the British farmer will not be discriminated against in Europe .
13 With the increasing sophistication and scale of warehouse buildings it is suggested that they should be looked at in depth at the earliest planning stage when they are able to exert their proper influence on construction and design .
14 The relevant points will be looked at in turn .
15 The American meteorological craft can not be looked at in isolation : they depend not only on Earth stations but also on processing equipment on the ground that makes sense of the data that the craft provide .
16 ‘ With the speed of integration of JAA and the Single European Market this issue can not be looked at in isolation from the overall harmonisation requirements which will influence the CAA 's regulatory system .
17 He has experimented successfully himself with low price hardbacks , but stresses that price can not be looked at in isolation .
18 They are not to be looked at in isolation and followed to the letter , but if you 're not sure about style , they will give you some useful ideas .
19 In order to make some local comparisons with Nikol'skaia , ties between the fifty-nine party cells and the people in Poltava guberniia will be looked at in passing .
20 Rather it would be best to take the most extreme cases as a basis for new thinking so that intermediate requirements can be looked at in perspective .
21 This will be looked at in Chapter 7 where a number of commercial DBMS are investigated .
22 How justified such a view is will be looked at in Chapter 3 .
23 Another said that the location of industry and Government Training Centres had to be looked at in terms of equal opportunity and access .
24 for clarity is that the actual projected requirements , as a series of projections produced by County Council are for four thousand three hundred households , and a projected requirement for three thousand three hundred dwellings , well quite clearly if the City of York itself can not accommodate the requirement generated from in that city , then it must be looked at in relation to the whole of the Greater York area , and the projections of the Greater York area do take into account the er the figures generated from within the City of York , therefore , yes , they are included within the Greater York figure .
25 The discharge of the basic obligations under the contract , relating to delivery , passing of risk and property , and payment , are partly a matter for negotiation between the parties ( although the SGA provides guidelines ) but must also be looked at in relation to s 3 of the UCTA , with its restrictions on clauses excluding liability for breach .
26 there would be security , full employment , and a great health and welfare service , where we would all be looked after in dignity in our old age .
27 And indeed , fit very well into what we call the section seventeen budget , which is section seventeen of the Children Act nineteen eighty nine , which er , does enable the local authority to provide preventative services , to avoid the need for children to be looked after in care .
28 As cholera began its measured advance through the garrison people instructed their friends privately as to which doctor they should be carried to in case of illness .
29 Set a floppy so it can be written to in drive A.
30 1806 " This Meeting having taken into Consideration the enormous amount of the Bill of Entertainment ( " The Bill at MacTaggart 's £16 " ) , Resolve that the following rules shall be attended to in future , viz. That for each Guest Setting at Table , the Landlord shall allow & produce a half Bottle of wine and a Bottle of Punch — a Bottle of Brandy to the whole Company — with small Beer — that the Landlord shall charge for each Sitting to Dinner a , the rate of 3/- , that the Servants half mutskin of Whisky … "
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