Example sentences of "[vb pp] at a [adj] date " in BNC.

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1 Remains are scarce as most of the work has been rebuilt at a later date .
2 The research is covering six sectors of industry and will be supplemented at a later date by a series of case studies .
3 Further venues/details can be added at a future date .
4 The finer details will have to be added at a later date when experience of operating in a contract culture has been gained .
5 ( The recessed verandah to the right of centre , with its sliding picture windows , was added at a later date . )
6 It has a narrow Norman tower , the battlements of which were added at a later date .
7 The first , having to do with the very nature of the notations , is that some of them have certainly been added at a later date .
8 When you have finished with the artwork , it can be stored in a stiff envelope or a file , along with the component layout diagram , so that it can be modified or re-used at a later date .
9 One of the changes introduced since the consultation period on the SAS 's exposure draft , published in May 1992 , is a distinction between an inherent uncertainty which may be expected to be resolved at a future date and one which exists because evidence does or did exist but is not available to the auditors and so arises because of a limitation in the auditors ' work .
10 It is usually more difficult to deal more effectively with a complaint if it is reported at a later date .
11 The committee deferred a decision on the application , and the matter will be further considered at a later date .
12 It is a matter best addressed at a future date in the light of the experience of the self-governing colleges .
13 MAS policy is to recover costs in full in the case of an unreasonable withdrawal ; in the event of failure to sell a small discount below our time costs may be appropriate , particularly if MAS is likely to be reappointed at a later date to have another attempt at the sale .
14 If this latter proposition is true , it would suggest that most patients in whom H pylori has been eradicated are unlikely to become reinfected at a later date .
15 She 'll be sentenced at a later date .
16 She 'll be sentenced at a later date .
17 The two men accused with Bedworth , who pleaded guilty to a number of charges , will be sentenced at a later date .
18 Mr. Cooper replied by letter on 9 May 1983 , in which he pointed out the absolute necessity that tenants of the dock company should not be disturbed at a later date and seeking clarification that the council would not seek in the terms of their letter of 31 March to draw a distinction between ‘ extremely detrimental ’ and detrimental .
19 Once the mistake is corrected the money can be collected at a later date .
20 Even if the two lists are merged at a later date , the historical traditionally positive attitudes toward the European languages may continue to permeate the philosophy underlying the education system ( including the curriculum and examinations ) .
21 Certainly this method of drawing has not been seen at a later date , and it would have been difficult to produce this quality and style of work in quantity .
22 Auto-dialling and remote access is possible from touch-tone telephones and electronic mail and voice-mail functions may be incorporated at a later date .
23 The disadvantage of using a partnership is that it is an unincorporated business , although tax-neutral mechanisms exist to enable it to be incorporated at a later date ( see s162 Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 ( " TCGA 1992 " ) and s343 TA 1988 ) .
24 Secondary sources , in contrast , are interpretations of the past produced at a later date .
25 Storage of transparencies allows them to be used at a later date , therefore time spent in careful production is time well used .
26 Crisis welcomes all donations , but non-perishable items are preferred , as they can be kept and used at a later date .
27 It might be held so that this currency in turn could be used at a later date to make foreign purchases of goods or services , a method often used to hedge exchange risk .
28 David Scott was not one of the more successful county politicians , and perhaps his attitude is a little too pure for the real world of eighteenth-century politics , but it represents , even if in an exaggerated form , the general political maxim that the politician performs friendly services for his friends without haggling over a bargain , or even implying that an understanding existed which might suggest that a vote was given for services rendered , or as in this case , for services which might be performed at a future date .
29 Cable & Wireless 's manager for managed data networks , Richard Henables , says that they will either be integrated at a later date , or they may simply receive a send level of service .
30 However the evidence suggests ( see pages 75–6 ) that it is more likely that this decision was reached at a later date , when the force of events made it seem imperative .
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