Example sentences of "child [unc] [noun sg] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I thought that Basil appreciated more than most the essential magic of the child 's experience of the world and the expression of this in art — not that he ever said this , but his own manner as a teacher always implied that this was a special , essentially elevated kind of activity — but one in which everyone had the capacity to join .
2 If , for example , the local authority is unable to find a suitable placement for the child because of a shortage of foster parents the court may decide that a care order is not to the child 's benefit despite the shortcomings of his own parents .
3 Well th , the money 's for the child 's benefit in the first place .
4 Just for a child to know that someone will be interested in her work or to have the opportunity to do something for someone else and know it will be appreciated can significantly change the child 's attitude to the task .
5 From the first heights heading north , the sails of the Adventure School 's windsurfers may be seen like pictures in a child 's storybook on the glimmering water .
6 He held that , even on an application for leave , the court must have regard to the child 's welfare as the paramount consideration .
7 The court has to consider the child 's welfare as the court 's paramount consideration , and also has to consider the various aspects referred to under section 1(3) , that is they have to consider the wishes of the children , their needs , the likely effects on the children of change , the characteristics of the children , the nature of the harm they have suffered and the capability of the parents or anybody else offering themselves as carers , which would include of course the grandparents in this case .
8 A reasonable parent , however anguishing the decision , would put his or her own child 's welfare in the forefront of the decision .
9 to be useful for teachers and parents and children to read as an informative and convincing story of the child 's progress over the years
10 How will I be informed of my child 's progress through the Compact ?
11 Switching to the smaller barriers in 1987 has proved child 's play for the sweetheart from Chigwell ever since .
12 Switching to the smaller barriers in 1987 has proved child 's play for the sweetheart from Chigwell ever since .
13 ‘ They would be child 's play in the modern world to get around .
14 The LEA 's decision to allow the child 's admission to the school was challenged by the Commission for Racial Equality , which asked the Secretary of State to use his default powers in the 1944 Act and quash the LEA 's decision , on the ground that the decision was racist and would encourage other parents to pursue the same course as Mrs C and for the same reason .
15 The court should approach an application for leave under section 10(9) on the basis that the local authority 's plans for the child 's future are designed to safeguard and promote the child 's welfare and that any departure therefrom might disrupt the child 's life to the extent of harming him ( post , pp. 429H — 430D ) .
16 Davies ' research will analyse that part of the child 's journey through the system which begins when the decision to make a video has been taken .
17 If a child has been made the subject of a supervision requirement following a referral to a children 's hearing on an offence ground , and that supervision requirement has been terminated and the child reappears before another children 's hearing , the main factors that the later hearing will need to consider to perform their statutory functions are why the child appeared before a children 's hearing , the reasons for that hearing 's disposal and , most particularly , the child 's response to the disposal ; in short , a children 's hearing would want to know the very things section 4 appears to prevent it ascertaining .
18 But when on several occasions there is the right correlation of the child 's behaviour with the child 's use of the term , we conclude that he has mastered its correct use .
19 Ewbank J. therefore erred in concluding that the child 's removal from the jurisdiction was not wrongful within the meaning of article 3 .
20 ( iv ) Infants — If a child ( or children ) of husband and wife is to be a beneficiary at the end of the trust and is likely to be an infant at that time , the trustees should perhaps be given power to pay the child 's share of the proceeds to the parent or guardian .
21 The Trustee Act 1925 , ss31-32 , should be extended ( see Williams on Wills 6th edn , Butterworths , 1987 , vol 2 , p1267 and 1275 ) if monies are to be retained until such child or children come of age , so that the trustees have flexibility in their use of both income and capital of a child 's share of the trust fund , as should the power of investment so that it is not limited by the Trustee Investments Act 1961. ( v ) Insurance — Section 19(1) of the Trustee Act 1925 limits a trustee 's power to insure to insurance against fire to three-quarters of the value of the property ; as the trustees will probably not have any cash , the occupier wife should be made responsible for insurance .
22 The child 's identification with the father is the primary act of ‘ giving face ’ , or prosopopoeia , in which the child at once understands and performs the mother 's materiality as sign , a process which can be expressed in de Man 's formula that questions the notions of agency in language : ‘ killing the mother by finding her already dead ’ ( p. 133 ) .
23 In continuing to speak of healthy relationships between children and parents , Searles emphasised the resolution of the Oedipal strivings , not just by the child 's identification with the parents of the same sex , not just by the final taboo and containment of the feelings , but also by the parent 's renunciation of the reciprocated romantic feelings with a real sense of loss , and also by the love between the parents to which the child owed his existence .
24 This may foster the child 's identification with the parent to an even greater extent .
25 Nor do I think we are , as a rule , justified as we may be with adults in using a child 's attraction to the worker to advance casework .
26 It 's about measuring the child 's proficiency against the proficiency of other children .
27 So the teacher of a blind child , while allowing all along in the child 's education for the difficulties he encounters , still prefers to emphasise to everyone the sameness of the child ( his skills and achievements ) .
28 The family must be willing and able to carry the child 's past into the present and sustain it into the future , thus linking the child with its ancestral past in a positive way .
29 GeoSafari ( above ) from Educational Insights is an electronic geography game that extends a child 's knowledge of the world .
30 … a child 's laughter at the water 's edge — then nothing , no misgivings , no thoughts … — What have I wanted until this day ?
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