Example sentences of "to [noun] [adv] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Some employers introduced ‘ speed-up ’ for their factory hands , resulting in less work for homeworkers , while others gave the best paying work to their indoor hands and gave out only the inferior grades of work which required the most time spent on it to houses where the inspectors were unlikely to penetrate .
2 I think I 've spoken to mum nearly every day this week actually .
3 If Marie Gibbs ' time course was right , I should expect to find a sequence of cellular changes in left and perhaps right IMHV and/ or LPO , associated with the several phases of memory formation , in the minutes to hours following the bird 's pecking at the bitter bead .
4 Maybe this song will catch on , but I think Deano needs to buck up a bit for it to get sung some more .
5 Horbury 's motto ‘ Pro Bono Oppido ’ ( for the good of the town ) lives on , as does the slogan of the Ossett Chamber of Trade : ‘ Come to Ossett where the shopping is on the level . ’
6 In 1155 , the customs confirmed by Louis VII for Lorris on the royal demesne established that no parishioner should have to pay taxes on food intended for his own consumption or on grain grown by his own labour ; he should be exempt from tolls when he took his produce to the neighbouring towns of Etampes , Orléans , Milly , or Melun ; if required for a chevauchée , he must be allowed to return home at the end of the day ; the only labour service he owed his lord was in carrying seigneurial wine to Orléans twice a year ; and the burgesses of Lorris as a whole were exempted from seigneurial tailles .
7 At the tiny station of Plowden an angry old woman asked whether we had permission to park our car in the yard , so I did n't add to her troubles by asking for a ticket to Ludlow , as I had intended , but drove on to Marshbrook where the porter was more kindly . ’
8 I talked to Whittaker almost a year to the day after Nelson Mandela had been released from his Cape prison .
9 To deal with the problem the Contaminated Land Unit was transferred to Swindon where a combination of management and water related skills were perceived necessary to rebuild this aspect of our business .
10 Therefore , in the description of the constellations here , I have limited myself to pairs where the components are not too unequal , and are at least 35 seconds of arc apart .
11 As abrasive as ever , Morrissey made an appearance on Radio One 's Round Table where he cut to ribbons practically every recording artist in the country .
12 After being hauled out by rescuers using a rope , he was helped up 300-ft high steps and a mile-and-a-half across moorland before changing back at his car and travelling back to Middlesbrough where the extent of his injuries were discovered .
13 As I understood the submission , the Attorney-General was not contending that the use of Parliamentary material by the courts for the purposes of construction would constitute an ‘ impeachment ’ of freedom of speech since impeachment is limited to cases where a Member of Parliament is sought to be made liable , either in criminal or civil proceeding , for what he has said in Parliament , e.g. , by criminal prosecution , by action for libel or by seeking to prove malice on the basis of such words .
14 The provisions below apply to cases where a claim other than one for money is made ( Ord 11 , r 3(1) ) and since unliquidated damages can not be the " whole sum " to which Ord 11 , r 2 ( above ) applies they appear to apply as well where unliquidated damages are claimed .
15 The interest of this text is that it makes clear both the availability of a remedy against a third party , and the fact that that party has notice of the existence of the trust ; and it apparently limits the availability of the missio to cases where the buyer does have notice : cases , therefore , in which bad faith is involved .
16 It may be argued by analogy that , given the importance under the CPA 1987 placed upon accurate instructions , this should permeate to cases where the buyer sues for economic loss under , for example , s14 of SGA 1979 .
17 Whatever the strength of this reasoning , it seems to apply to cases where the patient commits some act to achieve his end , and would not apply to the situation being discussed here .
18 The Minister has shown concern about sentencing patterns , but does his concern extend beyond that to cases where the prosecution service has not been prepared to prosecute an accused person ?
19 However , the right to seek such compensation under section 40(1) was to be restricted to cases where the employee could demonstrate that his invention was ‘ of outstanding benefit to the employer ’ .
20 This decision was subsequently approved by the Court of Appeal , but limited to cases where the assets comprised in both charges are the same , and it appears that a general floating charge on the whole of the undertaking may be postponed to a subsequent floating charge on a particular class of assets where the first charge contemplates the creation of the later charge .
21 This is apparently so whether or not there has been compliance with the formal requirements of company law applicable to dealings with the property of a company and even to cases where the consent relied on is ultra vires : see Reg. v. Roffel [ 1985 ] V.R. 511 and Reg. v. McHugh ( 1988 ) 88 Cr.App.R. 385 .
22 This is shown by the judgment of Lord Greene in Saltman where he said : " If two parties make a contract under which one of them obtains for the purpose of the contract or in connection with it some confidential matter , even though the contract is silent on the matter of confidence the law will imply an obligation to treat that confidential matter in a confidential way as one of the implied terms of the contract ; but the obligation of confidence is not limited to cases where the parties are in a contractual relationship " .
23 But this does not extend to cases where the loan may be replaced by another .
24 In Gouriet v. Union of Post Office Workers [ 1978 ] A.C. 435 Lord Wilberforce said at p. 481 , that the right to invoke the assistance of civil courts in aid of the criminal law is ‘ an exceptional power confined , in practice , to cases where an offence is frequently repeated in disregard of a , usually , inadequate penalty … or to cases of emergency …
25 The problem arises in connection with section 99 which adapts or applies the provisions to cases where an individual rather than the local authority wishes to make the complaint .
26 The most hair-raising operation at Honister was not digging the slate , but getting it down the fells to sheds where the material was riven and dressed for transportation by packhorse to ports and river barges .
27 Drawing from his experience of Japan , Johnson ( 1984 : p. 8 ) considered that this ‘ means the initiation and co-ordination of governmental activities to leverage upward the productivity and competitiveness of the whole economy and of particular industries in it …
28 The other irritant was the discovery by hundreds of English-speaking Quebeckers , who had courageously chosen to send their children to schools where the teaching is in French , that they had thereby deprived their grandchildren of the right to be taught in English if they wished .
29 Only in 1914 were Indonesians admitted to schools where the medium was Dutch ( these were intended for Dutch and Eurasian students ) .
30 He moved rapidly down-river to Rouen where a number of merchant vessels had been driven in by the exceptional tide , and requisitioned twenty-eight boats .
  Next page