Example sentences of "[noun sg] [noun sg] to meet the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Provided there is clear evidence of reimbursement , and there are sufficient funds in the loan/current account to meet the cost of any personal bills the company pays , there will be no liability for NICs .
2 Whatever your circumstances , the point is that you should have enough money coming in in the Income column to meet the outgoings in the Expenditure column with , hopefully , a bit left over for rainy days and holidays .
3 In order to develop a coherent transport strategy to meet the challenge of increased demand in the 1990s the Government should either invest itself or encourage the private sector to do so .
4 If significant provision is to be made it must be on the basis of a genuine negotiation and interaction between educators and the community , involving both social understanding and careful curriculum development to meet the needs of each particular group .
5 If the doors are the room 's only opening to the outside air , you should choose a type with a trickle ventilator built into the top frame member to meet the requirements of the Building Regulations .
6 It was founded by two former Everex executives , Raymond Yu , 33 as president , and Philip Lau , 35 , vice-president , as a design and manufacturing house to meet the needs of systems integrators and personal computer vendors that do not want to get involved in design and manufacturing .
7 Instead of the present series of piecemeal initiatives we will establish a coherent national training policy to meet the needs of industry and provide people with real equal opportunities at work .
8 The failure of the so-called low-cost housing scheme to meet the needs of the poor has led one Indian expert to say that what the poor need is not low-cost housing but no-cost housing .
9 In the latter case the Bank of England would have to hold a gold reserve to meet the demand of foreigners who wanted to convert sterling into gold .
10 The government implied that it would allow the privatised electricity industry to meet the reductions in the Directive by importing low-sulphur coal and by building gas-fired power stations to replace coal capacity .
11 From such a general classification , discussed in detail below , two very general conclusions can be shown to emerge : that several categories of small towns saw the provision of some form of internal street network to meet the needs of their inhabitants and that the existence of such a system , coupled with other morphological and functional indicators , might well reflect a higher degree of internal organization and urban complexity .
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