Example sentences of "be set [adv prt] in [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | could be set up in excess of fifty thousand |
2 | The revision proposed that works councils should be set up in order to vest in the workers a measure of control as against the bureaucratic command of the central planning authority . |
3 | Additionally the following measures were agreed : ( i ) that a joint working party would be set up , charged with defining " political offences in the South African situation " and with advising on " mechanisms for dealing with the release of political prisoners and the granting of immunity " ; ( ii ) that " temporary immunity from prosecution for political offences " would be considered as a matter of urgency for the ANC 's NEC members and others , to enable them to return to the country without fear of prosecution ; ( iii ) that the government would " review existing security legislation to bring it into line with the new dynamic situation developing in South Africa in order to ensure normal and free political activities " ; ( iv ) that the government would work towards the lifting of the state of emergency ; ( v ) that efficient channels of communication between the government and the ANC would be set up in order to curb violence and intimidation from whatever quarter . |
4 | In 1806 , Napoleon made the most of his victories by imitating the Caesars and decreeing that a great monument should be set up in honour of the Great Army that had done so well . |
5 | On Oct. 30 a Soviet Foreign Ministry spokesman said that " an organization of international economic co-operation will be set up in place of the CMEA " . |
6 | This allows input conditions to be set up in advance . |
7 | These schemes may be set up in liaison with local education authorities and school governors . |
8 | These materials are sometimes used in combination — aluminium windows may be set up in timber sub-frame , for example , and upvc windows usually have steel reinforcement inside their box sections for extra strength . |
9 | UN information sources reported in November that a new Centre for Environment and Development for the Arab region and Europe ( CEDARE ) , proposed by UNDP 's regional Bureau for Arab States and Europe , was expected to be set up in time for the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development . |
10 | Targets and constraints should be set down in accordance with the ambitions of the development plan . |
11 | In many cases the most probable answers can be set down in advance and this helps enormously towards analysis . |
12 | Here , operational procedures have to be set down in advance in order to specify areas of accountability and standards of performance ; there must be a monitoring system to feed back information on performance to the right authority centres , and arrangements to correct operational activity in the light of any shortcomings . |
13 | If this model of democracy prevails , social policies may be expected to be determined by the commitments of the political parties , and proposals for policy changes will be set out in election manifestos . |
14 | The new relationship , which will be set out in framework documents agreed between the minister and the chief executive of the agency , will cover areas such as recruitment and staff management , planning and financial arrangements . |
15 | In the process of definition the subdivisions of the gentry are shown to have been as numerous as those of the peerage ( which for the present purpose need not be set out in detail ) , and noticeably more complex . |
16 | There is hardly ever a good reason why the deal should not be set out in writing , and this may help to avoid future dispute , but you need to check the proposed wording carefully in conjunction with your advisers . |
17 | The committee 's terms of reference should be set out in writing and should detail clearly its authority and responsibilities . |
18 | For instance , although close relationships are usually protective , they can sometimes interfere with an adaptive mode of defence such as denial , which a person might be setting up in response to a particularly threatening event . |