Example sentences of "as [verb] in [adj -er] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ( a ) Retirement and expulsion As explained in earlier chapters of this book , where no express provision is contained in a partnership agreement or satisfactory arrangements can not be agreed to meet the particular circumstances of the partner concerned , the Partnership Act only offers dissolution as the answer to what to do with a partner whose continued presence in the firm is unwanted by his co-partners .
2 It also appears to be a cause of traveller 's diarrhoea in early childhood , as reported in older children and adults , and to be associated with chronic diarrhoea in such circumstances .
3 It differs widely from marriage as seen in earlier periods of social development or in some other Western countries .
4 As well as resulting in higher unit depletion costs , interest charges will cease to be capitalised when production from these fields begins , with a consequent adverse effect on Group profitability .
5 As well as resulting in higher unit depletion costs , interest charges will cease to be capitalised when production from those fields begins , with a consequent adverse effect on group profitability . ’
6 Clause 54(2) provided that , except as provided in later subsections ‘ the cost of a benefit is the amount of any expense incurred in or in connection with its provision . ’
7 I was curious to see what shrift she would receive in Naipaul 's novel : the work of a man who has been spoken of by an old friend , the novelist Paul Theroux , as having in earlier times been ‘ merciless , solitary , and ( one of his favourite words ) unassailable ’ .
8 Where their interests overlapped with the Maud Committee they reached similar conclusions , and we may concentrate on the latter as dealing in greater detail with the concerns of this chapter .
9 As detailed in earlier chapters , governors should be involved in the School 's Development Plan which must lay out both short-term aims and longer-term objectives in priority order but with an inbuilt degree of flexibility , should circumstances dictate a change of plan at any time .
10 As suggested in earlier editions of this book , a defendant does not fall within either category ( a ) or ( c ) solely because the MIB is obliged to meet any unsatisfied judgment which the plaintiff may obtain against him ( Powney v Coxage ( 1988 ) The Times , 8 March ) .
11 We try to offset this by widening access through alternative routes , multi-level patterns and so forth , as described in later pages , but the essential problem of supply and demand remains .
12 Given the lexical look-up of the script recognition system , as described in earlier chapters , there are cases where the system will not be able to suggest any allowable candidate string .
  Next page