Example sentences of "as [art] [unc] [unc] [no cls] " in BNC.

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1 On the main island of Curaçao which was allocated 14 seats , Liberia Peters 's centre-right National People 's Party ( Nationale Volkspartij — NVP — also known as the Partido Nashonal di Pueblo ) won seven seats ( compared with six in the last elections in November 1985 — see pp. 34291-92 ) .
2 At the time , though , he was not aware — could never have been aware — of the extraordinary service he would have to render as the quid pro quo of the agreement .
3 The basis for this implied authority was , therefore , seen as the in loco parentis principle — the teacher acting in place of the parent and subject only to the same limits imposed by the law on the parent .
4 Having said that , it is entirely possible that one is being hopelessly naïve and that it is simply that the AIDS test has replaced the screen test as the sine qua non for any ambitious ingénue .
5 In any event the ‘ Far East ’ solution depended , with rather specious simplicity , on the ability to separate communist sheep from nationalist goats and even though the distinction was recognized as the sine qua non of a solution , it assumed that those who would not support genuine independence , once it was granted by the French , would identify themselves as communists : and would thereby distinguish themselves from the rest of the ‘ nationalist elements ’ who comprised the major part of the resistance forces .
6 It also made more than passing obeisance to the logic of the experiment which , for many and wrongly , was taken as the sine qua non of the scientific method .
7 Five of the eight appear on the royal books for 1661 as members of the ensemble known as the Hautbois et musettes de Poitou .
8 A group of Teleuts , in tsarist documents known as the vyezzhye belye Kalmyki , moved into Russian-held territory and settled there out of reach of the Teleut princes .
9 The first type of ‘ Negroid ’ painting is more purely pictorial and is represented by the sketches and series of heads which culminate in the Nu à la Draperie , a painting of late 1907 which is known also as the Danseuse aux Voiles .
10 Books such as the Architectura Navalis Mercatoria of the Swede Chapman ( 1768 ) and the Examen Maritimo Teorico Practico of the Spaniard Jorge Juan ( 1771 ) show that this was beginning to have some influence on shipbuilders .
11 As she is impervious to his suggestions , he is determined to revive the old custom known as the droit du seigneur ( one of the most hated abuses of the Ancien Régime ) , whereby the lord of a manor was entitled to deflower his female servants before their weddings .
12 personally do is as a mo er er for my kids that I teach is they write their homework in the back of their exercise book so their homework diary is the back you know
13 That the British eventually accepted the American view in most details shows that they had largely subsumed the aviation issue in the larger question of economic viability , and used aviation as a quid pro quo for the American loan .
14 This increase is seen as a quid pro quo for the LFA extension in England and Wales .
15 Furthermore the clergy extracted as a quid pro quo some deceptively reassuring royal answers to their grievances , the answers known as the Articuli Cleri or ‘ Articles of the Clergy ’ .
16 ‘ If they had been involved in the kind of ideas that led to this distinctive industrial policy of '73 –'74; they would have demanded as a quid pro quo for the successive incomes policies of 1975–6–7 the other side of the social contract , that these various aspects of industrial policy and worker participation in its various forms should be implemented ’ ( 1980 , p.7 ) .
17 In modern conditions the only remaining peg on which to hang the concession theory 's claim that the state has a special right of intervention in company affairs is the idea that since separate personality and limited liability are benefits conferred by the state , the state is entitled to intervene to safeguard the public interest as a quid pro quo .
18 The effects of the wartime blockade led the government under Lloyd George to take steps to stimulate home food production by offering price guarantees to farmers ; and as a quid pro quo to the unions the government also promised to establish a statutory minimum wage , to be negotiated by central and district wages boards .
19 ‘ We 've called our campaign off as a quid pro quo for their accepting the need for legislation to control the conservation of energy . ’
20 The United States presented this as a quid pro quo for the Soviet failure to establish a missile base in Cuba .
21 As a quid pro quo for the loss of this privilege any statement or admission made will not be admissible in evidence against the maker or his spouse in criminal proceedings except for perjury ( s98(2) ) .
22 Despite the extent of union influence and the predominantly co-operative patterns of industrial relations , collective bargaining has not brought BR and RENFE workers great financial rewards , even as a quid pro quo for job loss and changing working practices .
23 No they 'd probably take it as an a as a er er n okay to just go and just
24 Consequently , although reformers saw ‘ adaptability ’ as a sine qua non of citizenship , many were equally insistent on the more overtly political aspects of what was usually paraded as a moral concept , even though the intensification of class politics from the 1880s onwards more or less completely subordinated the purely moral principles .
25 for example , ICI does n't have a chief executive and operates on a consensus basis with the chairman acting as a primus inter pares .
26 The play functions as a mise en abyme of the novel as a whole .
27 For the rest of his career he was to use his two Christian names , Hugh Kingsmill , as a nom de plume .
28 Until well into the 1970s , the almost universal conventional wisdom — except perhaps in the United States — was that the government should stand ready to act as a deus ex machina , stepping in to save the capitalist system from its inherent defects of inequality in the distribution of the wealth it created , of unbalanced investment that created private affluence and public squalor , and or vulnerability to cyclical downturn , slump and unemployment ( for example , Shonfield , 1965 ; Galbraith , 1956 ) .
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