Example sentences of "[adj] [noun] to look at the " in BNC.

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1 The Institute 's Education & Training Directorate and the General Practitioner Board have been watching the falling numbers of students training in small firms with deep concern and both have set up working parties to look at the problems .
2 I remember Christmas Eve 1930 , when we went as we always did on that day to the High Street to look at the lighted shops , seeing a little girl in a tattered dress and with bare feet , her nose pressed at the toy-shop window .
3 Mr Whitty told delegates the NEC had given them ‘ adequate time to look at the reviews ’ .
4 ‘ It was felt it was in the public interest to look at the company which was already insolvent , ’ said a DTI spokeswoman .
5 Other specific provision includes an ESL ( English as a Second Language ) initiative which seeks to help unwaged individuals from ethnic minorities to look at the skills involved in setting up small businesses or entering self-employment .
6 The commission is now going to set up a special working group to look at the problem .
7 The three-year research project funded by the English National Board to look at the learning experiences in the community found working with students was ‘ time consuming ’ and ‘ slowed down the work of the nurse ’ .
8 As the level of county commitment to social education lessens it would seem to be a time for us as members of local parish , town and diocesan communities to look at the priority given to such work with our own young people .
9 We are establishing an ethical committee to look at the effects of advanced techniques in animal breeding .
10 It might then be a good time to look at the original sources of stress which created these symptoms in the first place .
11 Suddenly the girl raised her immense grey eyes to look at the gardener .
12 The setting up of the Select Committee to look at the whole under-fives area
13 Let us consider more closely what was implied in the Greek refusal to look at the Bible .
14 A French medic was climbing the grassy bank from the sunken road to look at the Officer as I got the prisoners out of the dug-out and back to their previous positions in the hollow .
15 Regional health authority officers insist they have no immediate plans to look at the possibility of merging districts .
16 Squeeze past the parked cars to look at the wonderful little shops , which specialize in tin toys , dolls ' houses and cinema posters then turn right into Marché aux Fromages to get back to Grand'Place .
17 SCOTVEC therefore welcomed the decision of SED to set up a small committee to look at the module/short course issues , particularly in the context of schools ' S3/4 stages .
18 It 's a difficult job to look at the legislation and see a way through it for organisations dealing with homelessness — there is no way through it .
19 One evening , when we were sorting , two successive pairs of charming Americans wandered through the open door to look at the Church .
20 Having examined the income and retained earnings statements of the firm , the final way to look at the firm 's financial structure is to examine its balance sheet .
21 Ever since the RSPCA established a Working Party to look at the implications of fishing , we have been concerned about one of its conclusions , which is that fish should be given the benefit of the doubt with regard to their ability to experience pain .
22 In Britain , the electronics industry has set up a working party to look at the options .
23 No because I think that is a matter for the local planning authorities in their their local district wide local plans to look at the the way in which they wish to meet the particular totals for their individual districts .
24 Then they felt that the most effective way of dealing with it would be for each main committee to look at the various aspects in detail , rather than take the and miss everything , best for each of the main committees to look in detail at each part .
25 In 1979 an operational researcher was brought in from the academic world to look at the use being made of Exminster .
26 NARAL is asking readers of the New York Times to see a loss of women 's rights as a loss of Americans ' rights , thus implying that this is a novel way to look at the matter .
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