Example sentences of "of [det] [noun pl] [adv] [subord] " in BNC.

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1 I obviously can not swear allegiance to the principles of equal opportunities then justify the exclusion of some students purely because of the severity of their disability .
2 The Act allowed the retention of adoption of such titles simply as a further concession to local sentiment .
3 It will be noticed that in all of this the term " correlate " is being used in a way consistent with our previous uses of " event " , " cause " , " condition " , " causal circumstance " , and " effect " : not for a type of thing , but for a thing itself , more particularly an individual property or set of such properties rather than a type .
4 Bachelard himself preferred to give examples of such ruptures rather than theorize how they took place .
5 ‘ That the Directors be and are hereby authorised to establish and to permit the Company 's subsidiaries to establish such employee share schemes as they consider appropriate for the participation therein of employees of the Company or any of its subsidiaries who are resident or working overseas , and from time to time to make to permit the making of such alterations thereto as they consider necessary or appropriate provided always that the terms of such schemes shall , as far as is appropriate having regard to local circumstances and local taxation consideration , be similar to those of the Dawson International Savings Related Share Option Scheme and that the overall limits on the number of Ordinary Shares in the Company which may be subscribed for under all the Company 's employee share schemes shall not be increased thereby and that Ordinary Shares which may be subscribed for under such overseas schemes shall count towards such limits . ’
6 It is the only meeting place in the parish , and local residents have happy memories of such occasions there as Coronation parties , Jubilee teas , wedding receptions , dances , whist drives etc .
7 However , it may happen that particular variables selected for analysis turn out to be especially markers of one of these functions rather than another : one variable may be chiefly a close-tie network marker and another a marker of gender-differentiation .
8 Modigliani felt the pain of these visits more than any of them , and was horrified to see his old friend in dingy and sinister surroundings , humiliated and frightened .
9 Since most employment rights are dependent upon the possession of a record of continuous service with a single employer , most casual workers would fail to qualify for most of these rights even if they did have dependent employee status .
10 Since LMS has restrictions ( such as levels of pay , conditions of service etc. ) it is important that staff are aware of these limitations rather than perceiving them as restrictions/lack of initiatives placed on them by management .
11 The superior results of these headings more than justify the extra time i involved in making them .
12 Students take three subjects in the first year and in subsequent years continue with two of these subjects either as joint or major/minor options for the honours degree .
13 We shall return to some of these facts below when we consider social deixis , Here we should simply note that these various distinctions are often encoded in verbal inflections in an isomorphic manner .
14 Can it be , that when Gandhi refers to morality without religion as being similar to a house built on sand he is simply expressing in a different way his belief in the convertibility of these terms rather than suggesting that morality has to be related to a particular religion ?
15 If , for example , the Gnat 's Water Brewery , which operates three inns in a small country village , wishes to close and sell off one of these inns so as to improve the profitability of its remaining inns , it may insert a restrictive covenant into the conditions of sale of the inn in question , whereby the purchaser of the inn covenants not to use the premises as licensed premises .
16 From a study of closely-dated deposits on Hadrian 's Wall , John Gillam did not date any of these vessels earlier than c .
17 While Roderick et al ( 1982 ) in their study of English universities report that only 25.9% of unqualified mature students obtain a ‘ good ’ degree , this is a percentage of all entrants rather than graduates , and is therefore not directly comparable with Bourner and Hamed and Walker 's figures .
18 The majority took the view that the case for banning non-voting ordinary shares had not been made out but that such shares should be clearly labelled and that their holders should be entitled to receive notices of all meetings so as to be kept informed .
19 ‘ It is easier for the institutions to give us records of all accounts rather than trying to strip out just those accounts which paid above a certain level of interest .
20 To place the authority for running the businesses with the heads of those businesses rather than with the central directors ;
21 Mrs Zamzam had left her home on the other side of those hills more than three decades earlier and she had never been back .
22 So I will always remind you of those things even though you know them as a firmly established in the truth .
23 But I do n't see any problem , from the figures I 've given you , in handling any of those forecasts really when you 're talking about a very small proportion in our part of the world compared to the probably the figures that you 're talking about around er Leeds , Bradford , Harrogate .
24 The Attorney-General referred to the Court of Appeal under section 36 of the Criminal Justice Act 1972 the questions whether proceedings upon indictment could be stayed on the grounds of prejudice resulting from delay in the institution of those proceedings even though that delay had not been occasioned by any fault on the part of the prosecution , and , if so , what degree of likelihood and seriousness of prejudice was required to justify a stay of such proceedings .
25 whether proceedings upon indictment may be stayed on the grounds of prejudice resulting from delay in the institution of those proceedings even though that delay has not been occasioned by any fault on the part of the prosecution ;
26 whether proceedings upon indictment may be stayed on the grounds of prejudice resulting from delay in the institution of those proceedings even though that delay has not been occasioned by any fault on the part of the prosecution ;
27 ‘ ( i ) whether proceedings upon indictment may be stayed on the grounds of prejudice resulting from delay in the institution of those proceedings even though that delay has not been occasioned by any fault on the part of the prosecution ; ( ii ) if the answer to ( i ) above is in the affirmative what is the degree of : ( a ) the likelihood and ( b ) the seriousness of any prejudice which is required to justify a stay of such proceedings .
28 It 's like Florence in Italy — one of those places where if you have money , it 's a wonderful place to be , and if you do n't , it 's f—ing terrible .
29 ‘ I would n't trust one of those bastards further than I could throw him .
30 And this you know sort of more flowers on as well .
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