Example sentences of "takes account [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Some observers also calculate that , if one takes account of the profits forgone from these enterprises in future years and sets them against the revenues raised now , the government may have sold the assets at too low a price .
2 According to The Mirage Resort , the gate receipt from the crowd of 16,000 was a world record of $9.1million ( £6m ) , which seems slightly suspect since that works out an average of $500 before one takes account of the undisclosed figure of complimentary tickets .
3 Girls are underrepresented in the exclusion statistics — which would imply that there is unlawful sex discrimination , until one takes account of the well-documented fact that the behaviour of girls and boys and girls at school differs .
4 In practice , the new narrative is based in large part on what might be described as a broader concept of realism , one which takes account of the complex , multifaceted nature of reality .
5 If this affects you , the enclosed Renewal Notice takes account of the new rates .
6 Although in many cases this will mean that a solution to a problem is found , it also takes account of the fact that some problems are insoluble .
7 Allan Fromme makes the point that good discipline takes account of the child 's emotional life , which we know much more about today .
8 The analysis points to the need for the development of a fuzzy geodemographics methodology which takes account of the effects of different types of spatial errors .
9 Determination of the true formation resistivity takes account of the influence of the so-called Groningen effect .
10 Such understanding is necessary , not simply to assess realistically what can and can not be expected of such informal care , but also to develop the formal sector of care in a way which takes account of the prevailing norms of a given area .
11 It has inevitably to be exercised within a wider framework that takes account of the general interests of the community , both local and national , in the education process .
12 If the labour supply is refined further to the level of labour input , which takes account of the length of the working year , then zero growth is recorded from 1951 ; and from the mid 1960s it turned into an actual decline at over 1 per cent per annum .
13 Also , a detailed treatment of radiative heating and cooling takes account of the concentration of CO 2 and the distribution of ozone .
14 In order to define mental alienation and abnormality , the psychiatrist must first know what is normal , accepted and socially approved ; since these vary in different cultures and subcultures he will be completely at sea outside his own milieu unless he takes account of the cultural factor .
15 Since then a report of the Royal College of Physicians has also emphasised the need for a comprehensive approach to the problem which takes account of the wide range of factors influencing both the supply of tobacco products and demand for them by young people .
16 On the other hand , polycentric disputes can only be satisfactorily resolved if the solution takes account of the interests of all affected parties and if the decision-maker has access to all relevant information and opinions from whatever quarter they come .
17 By ‘ social action ’ Weber refers to action ‘ which takes account of the behaviour of others and is thereby oriented in its course ’ .
18 The distinction is not clean and complete , partly because the umbrella has some social significance and is not customary everywhere , partly because some behaviour , like avoiding other people when wanting to be alone , takes account of the behaviour of others without exactly being social .
19 Indeed , at the end of this chapter we will be arguing an alternative position ( based on human rights ) which although non-utilitarian nevertheless takes account of the possible reductivist effects of punishment .
20 This result underlines the importance of employing a measure which takes account of the number of workers in question in relation to the total number of employees in the organisation when testing propositions about the influence of size on personnel practices .
21 The external version of the theory holds that the ‘ market value ’ of top managers ( which takes account of the salary they could command if they moved to a different employer ) will increase where they are associated with a successful company and therefore that directors will do all they can to boost profitability .
22 In order to further an understanding of the various dimensions to ageing with a disability , we need a conceptual framework which takes account of the dual experience of both ageing and disability .
23 Detailed work on drafting the initial estimates for the next financial year by departments takes account of the prior guidelines and studies that have been undertaken .
24 They then receive a net sum that takes account of the sums patients pay .
25 The contingency approach does , however , draw our attention to the fact that different structures may be necessary for the different activities that an organisation performs and takes account of the differing environment within which organisations operate .
26 The distinction between the two main streams of Greek verse represented by Homer and Archilochus can now be restated in a way that , incidentally , takes account of the essential differences of phraseology between Homeric poetry and the lyric tradition that begins with Archilochus and ( ends ) with Pindar ( V B.C. ) .
27 ( 5.14 ) with The multiplier n/2 takes account of the difference in the number of phases between the two types .
28 The thesis of ‘ The intentional fallacy ’ , that the meaning of the words in a text is , and should be treated as , a matter of public knowledge , seems wholly unexceptionable as far as the dictionary-definition ( the ‘ denotation ’ ) of words is concerned ; but it seems much more problematic when one takes account of the broader associations that words carry with them ( ‘ connotations ’ ) .
29 Where debt finance is used , each generation takes account of the reduction in subsequent utilities caused by the taxes necessary to finance the debt , and increases its bequest .
30 It takes account of the UK policy that qualifications should be based on competence and so reflect what people can do .
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