Example sentences of "are [adv] set [adv prt] in " in BNC.

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1 The arrangements for such a meeting are normally set out in the articles of association of the company .
2 The new requirements are largely set out in the Building Societies ( Accounts and Related Provisions ) Regulations 1992 , although where the change necessitated a change to the 1986 Act itself , that has been effected through the s 104 mechanism , which enables company law to be applied to building societies by Order .
3 Psychological experiments of the rats-in-mazes kind are always set up in such a way that , even if the animals concerned had been capable of exercising individual judgement in such a way as to wreck the experiment , this fact would escape detection .
4 Stalls are still set out in the open air and the market place is hemmed in by shops , banks and public houses whose frontages still respect the ancient property boundaries .
5 The procedures are clearly set out in the planning circulars .
6 Wordsworth did not comment much on these matters in the first edition of his Guide but they are clearly set out in the second edition ( 1820 ) .
7 There are certain exclusions and these are clearly set out in the appropriate policy .
8 Although in theory we do not know how it would have turned out if that had been the only option available to Mr. Thorpe , we know that the principles are clearly set out in the health service management documents and at a political level by my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State .
9 The numbers involved are also set out in table 10.3 .
10 These models from the ‘ me ’ generation are frequently set up in opposition to the ‘ they ’ models of the parents ' generation .
11 The facts are fully set out in the judgments of Vinelott J. at first instance [ 1990 ] 1 W.L.R. 204 and of the Court of Appeal [ 1991 ] Ch. 203 .
12 The reasons underlying that decision and the factors that my right hon. Friend and I took into account are fully set out in the letter of 1 November to the chairman of the Countryside Council for Wales , copies of which have been placed in the Library .
13 These are conveniently set out in Duncan & Neill on Defamation , 2nd ed. , p. 3 , para. 2.03 and have been summarised in the judgment of Balcombe L.J. ; I do not propose to repeat them .
14 This will be so whether he takes the trouble to read them or not , and whether they are actually set out in a document in his possession , or ( subject to the question of the need to offer an oppportunity to inspect , which is discussed below ) merely incorporated into the contract by a reference in such a document .
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