Example sentences of "take [prep] [noun sg] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The final result awarded to each candidate takes into consideration the formative assessment results obtained during their clinical attachment , which incorporates a summative assessment obtained before the examination .
2 Standardization is a statistical technique which takes into account the differential age distribution ( see Table 4.11 ) and this suggests that older women do indeed experience more ill health than males of the same age .
3 This balance is more in keeping with the needs of young people and takes into account the low self-esteem of many of those in public care .
4 This approach takes into account the changing nature of the relationship between the leaders and others and indicates how it may develop .
5 If , however , instead of being redeemed , the preference shares are converted into ordinary shares and the number of ordinary shares issued takes into account the accrued premium , no premium becomes payable and , accordingly , there is no distribution .
6 Whereas a comprehensive secondary school might offer some 30 subjects for all its pupils , and about a dozen subjects account for the great majority of A levels , the curriculum explodes in higher education , part of a post-school explosion even greater when one takes into account the vast number of technical and vocational courses that exist in non-advanced further education .
7 It also takes into account the actual disability and , whether or not it handicaps a person in working , it provides some financial compensation for it .
8 An equal distribution takes into account only the size of the population groups that are being compared , while an equitable distribution takes into account the varying needs for the service of the groups as well .
9 ‘ Our policy takes into account the possible impact of this , ’ said Mike .
10 This view takes into account the general view that crime is or ought to be those actions which are considered so immoral or damaging that they should be subject to punishment .
11 A real rate of interest , which would be calculated as an annual rate per cent , takes into account the following facts : — the period of the loan may not be for a full year : interest is only charged on the actual amount borrowed ( eg not including any deposit paid ) ; — if regular repayments are being made , the full amount of the loan is not outstanding over the full year .
12 Launched in 1986 to guide firms through ‘ Big Bang ’ , European Investment Banking Report now takes into account the dramatic changes sweeping across Europe .
13 Another model of Sgr A takes into account the latest observational evidence : the radio emission from Sgr A results from a supermassive black hole accreting from the winds of HeI emission-line stars in the central few arcseconds .
14 Who takes into account the sleepless nights , the missed family time , the frayed marriages , the unending responsibility ?
15 AI urges members to contact their local MPs to push for a law which : provides that all transfers of repressive technology , equipment and training be disclosed in advance ; takes into account the human rights situation of the receiving country ; establishes channels for the receipt of information from non-governmental organisations on human aspects of such transfers ; and demonstrates , before such transfers take place , that they will not contribute to human rights violations .
16 Pratt is specifically concerned with the ideological implications of landscape descriptions in novels and travel reports , and argues for the development of a stylistics that goes beyond purely aesthetic considerations , and takes into account the social , historical and ideological dimensions of texts .
17 The notion of absence of a before/after relation between the bare infinitive and the verb to which it is incident can be applied quite readily to its use with auxiliary do , if one takes into account the peculiar nature of auxiliaries .
18 This takes into account the particular needs of the authority : some areas will have particularly high numbers of old people , for instance , or underprivileged groups , or bad housing , which require higher spending for the same level of services .
19 A proposed Interior Department regulation , to go into effect shortly after the presidential election , effectively takes on board the recent court rulings , and provides for compensation payments to all coal owners affected .
20 Finally , the rural team in the Resource Development Department plays a vital role in ensuring all N C V O's work takes on board the rural dimension .
21 Criticism of the illogicality of the Opposition must take into account the complete collapse of faith in the government by the end of 1938 .
22 c The formula was calculated on average speciality costs which do not take into account the extra severity and complexity of referrals particularly to teaching hospitals .
23 There is evidence from America that costing by ‘ Diagnosis Related Group ’ may provide a disincentive to offering support and aftercare to elderly people , as average figures for ‘ cost per case ’ may not take into account the higher costs incurred by some elderly people who need longer recovery times or more aftercare .
24 Such a claim is too simplistic ; it does not take into account the various faces of women 's domesticity .
25 Some would argue that such a view does not take into account the complex nature of the human mind .
26 ‘ This does not take into account the current demand for nursing and residential home beds in Cheshire and the county council believes this could mean Cheshire receiving only £30m instead of the £40m needed to meet existing demand .
27 Neither do they take into account the additional disadvantages associated with increasing remoteness , such as transport costs .
28 He believed that clinical descriptions of neuroses do not take into account the inner experiences of the patient which may be valid and even illuminating .
29 Despite their differences , however , both initiatives are associated with an increasing interest in modular-based curriculum provision , and with forms of assessment which can take into account the wide range of outcomes they are designed to achieve .
30 It is open for him to ‘ take into account the wider interests of the public ’ .
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