Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb mod] reflect the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Very low-grade disseminated copper mineralisation may reflect the eroded deep levels of a copper porphyry system .
2 Evidently , there can only be one correct word in a given sentence position , and this result may reflect the effective exploitation of this constraint .
3 Examinations set for areas of study of the diploma programme may reflect the individual centre 's current approach to unseen testing and could include , for example , unseen case studies .
4 This was a suggestion that the divisional structure of the Department should reflect the regional structure of education administration in Northern Ireland rather than ‘ the functional areas of educational activity ’ .
5 The apportionment should reflect the exempt and taxable ( including intended taxable ) use of the property .
6 ‘ Our society has a large and varied membership and this year 's lecture programme will reflect the wide range of opinion among the society 's members . ’
7 This must be plate glass ( 6mm or more ) , because the glass thickness must reflect the overall tank size .
8 The UK should aim to rejoin the ERM in the course of the next 18 months when the strength of sterling should reflect the underlying strength of the economy and not be solely the product of high interest rates .
9 Several studies have shown that flow cytometric detection of DNA aneuploidy might reflect the malignant potential of gastrointestinal cancers .
10 In other cases , the decision about how to finance a service will reflect the political and ethical values that underpin the policy .
11 He found it hard to believe that the 3 per cent of allegations of racial discrimination sustained by the authority could reflect the true picture , and he supported an independent investigatory agency to handle all aspects of complaints against the police .
12 After all , it seems likely that the form of wage and price rigidity in an economy will reflect the economic environment , one component of which is likely to be the behaviour of aggregate demand .
13 ARCHITECTURAL hierarchy should reflect the social : palaces should have a noble character and imposing magnificence ; royal residences merely grandeur and attractiveness ; and the arrangement of the residences of people of different rank — clerics , army offices .
14 The initial purchase consideration should reflect the present performance of the business .
15 So , once again , the measure which is adopted in the definition of deindustrialization must reflect the underlying concern behind the question .
16 Variations in intra-organizational transmission will reflect the internal composition of enterprise actors , their relationships with each other , and also the external relations of each with other parts of the state .
17 Various complications arise , notably the fact that eurobond activities are typically only one business entered into by a conglomerate , the results of which may be hidden in its balance sheet ( though , given the importance of joint demand for fixed income business in general , total profits on the balance sheet may reflect the underlying profitability of eurobonds ) .
18 According to corporate finance theory , ‘ the share price of any company should reflect the present value of the company 's stream of future cash flows ’ .
19 The grading should reflect the actual responsibilities of the job , and any additional qualifications and experience you bring to the job : follow the advice given on contracts and job descriptions generally and be careful to establish what the parameters of the contract are before you agree to it .
20 These findings suggest that the rearrangement of the PGC gene may reflect the atrophic change of gastric mucosa .
21 Therefore , Mitchell and Green concluded , the additional reading time must reflect the additional difficulty of relating the information currently being obtained to information presented earlier in the passage .
22 Orwell 's socialism would reflect the democratic virtues characteristic of the English working class — ‘ the genuinely popular culture … that goes on beneath the surface , unofficially and more or less frowned on by the authorities . ’
23 Maximising the value of the firm , however , does not entail any kind of trade-off between short- and long-term profits , since it is assumed that the firm 's present value will reflect the future proceeds of current investment .
  Next page