Example sentences of "change [prep] [noun pl] ' [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The main concern of the chapters on international relations is with facts revealing the changes of states ' attitudes .
2 The effectiveness of pupil learning in all curriculum areas , changes in teachers ' attitudes and awareness of the needs of children with learning difficulties , and long-term modifications to curriculum materials and teaching strategies will all be equally , if not more , relevant .
3 The ASB agreed that changes in shareholders ' funds other than those included in the statement of total recognised gains and losses can also be important in understanding the change in a reporting entity 's financial position , and concluded that this additional information should be required in a reconciliation of movements in shareholders ' funds .
4 Thus the model can not take account either of changes in operators ' costs or of developments such as road pricing or a carbon tax which could be in place in the medium or long term .
5 The 1981 English House Condition Survey ( Department of the Environment 1982 ) supports the general urban-rural differences found in 1976 , although slight changes in surveyors ' classifications of district as rural , urban or conurbations make precise comparisons difficult .
6 To pinpoint single factors affecting inventories has proved difficult , although Kennedy ( 1986 ) notes that a modified stock-adjustment principle on the lines above helps explain changes in manufacturers ' inventories during much of the 1960s and 1970s .
7 The choice of haven will be ruled by various factors : existing links , geographical/time zone convenience , language , legal system , special regimes and incentives , and , possibly , changes in competitors ' regimes as well .
8 The apparent changes in the prevalence of health problems may reflect changes in peoples ' expectations about their health as well as real changes in the prevalence of chronic health problems .
9 One may therefore think of an innovation in teaching methods as being designed to achieve a set of intentions ( eg , changes in pupils ' ways of thinking ) by means of a set of processes which are usually only rather coarsely determined .
10 Background music made a change from bookies ' cries .
11 Despite some evidence of change in teachers ' attitudes and behaviour , they themselves were reluctant to admit that the project had influenced them .
12 The first is a perceptible change in judges ' attitudes to judicial review .
13 Any change in public deposits must be matched by an equal and opposite change in bankers ' deposits , from which still further consequences may follow .
14 The industry is expected to excuse itself by highlighting the last-minute change in voters ' allegiances , reflected in the last polls .
15 He detected a marked change in buyers ' tastes towards pieces dating from the latter part of the eighteenth century and away from seventeenth-century , Louis XIV and Regence work , traditional areas for major collectors .
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