Example sentences of "[det] member [prep] [art] public " in BNC.

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1 Some members of the public bring these so routinely that their complaints are not taken seriously by rankers , although complaints from others are ( see Weitzer 1986 ) .
2 One neighbourhood policeman was known among colleagues ( and some members of the public ) for his proclivity for dispensing parking tickets .
3 The physical barriers that prevent some members of the public reaching a CAB are perhaps easier to tackle than the image barriers .
4 For the next few years American audiences were shown aspects of their society that they could never have expected to have encountered at the movies and it must have struck at least some members of the public that film-going had become a more serious business .
5 He suggests that if outside investors are unaware of which corporations have managers who trade on inside information , some members of the public will refrain from investment altogether , while others will incur costs to avoid dealing with executives with non-public information .
6 Some would argue that the major deficiency in the green form scheme is that it is administered through solicitors and must , therefore , share the same unattractiveness to some members of the public .
7 Also the rates had a regressive effect on some members of the public : e.g. on elderly people who sometimes occupied large , highly rated properties but who could no longer afford to pay the rates demanded since their incomes were insufficient .
8 One was that some members of the public were unaware that they need not pay and gave in to the pressure of successive threatening letters .
9 But there always remains still one point of complaint by some members of the public , that is that the grass that 's cut does tend to blow about , but if the cutting is frequent , there 's less grass t to blow about at a given time .
10 HARDLY surprising that some members of the public are increasingly frustrated with our apparent unwillingness to make our product more available and complain through the various channels open to them .
11 Relatively few members of the public have been killed in Britain by industrial accidents in recent years .
12 In the case of neither plan was attention drawn to this fundamental change in the plans accompanying the text , or at public consultation displays , and few members of the public have therefore been aware of the prevailing washed-over status of Skelton , and consequence consequently of the intended change to it .
13 … This means in practice that one out of every twenty samples will fail to comply with the standard and the Authority will be at risk from somebody , some member of the public , prosecuting . ’
14 Although it is the coroner 's court 's function simply to find the cause of death , under what circumstances it happened and who , if anybody , is to be charged and with what , many members of the public plus the national papers were speaking as if Drew had already been indicted .
15 I can not believe that many members of the public believe that that is justice , or that it conveys the right message to those who , tonight , will steal a car and race it in the path of some other innocent victim .
16 Norman McMordie , Dalgety 's sales manager , said : ‘ Local shows are being attended by many members of the public who do not have an in-depth knowledge of farming .
17 Many members of the public can not afford to buy papers regularly and would therefore miss out on the invitation to take part in consultation exercises .
18 Er many members of the public took advantage of the offer of the more detailed appraisal er and indeed came in to look at the detailed consultants reports .
19 The committee appeal to all members of the public who walk their dogs in this area to try to prevent their dogs from fouling the actual pitch , and if they do , to please remove it !
20 He added : ‘ An appeal is made to all members of the public to pass any information , no matter how insignificant they feel it to be , to the police , either at Aberdeen or their local police station . ’
21 If only more members of the public were as cooperative as you have been , our life would be a lot easier . ’
22 Obviously with the coming of two elections shortly we have the opportunity to do a lot more canvassing and contact more members of the public and to draw in new members from there .
23 Those members of the public who have not had an opportunity to experience contact with the mentally handicapped except in the most superficial way inevitably draw their opinions from the concepts portrayed in the mass media and , above all , from what they see on television .
24 The IPG states clearly that it is designed for advice workers , but many instances have proved that clients have used it successfully when left to browse by hard-pressed advisers — an indication of its clarity of exposition and potential as a tool for those members of the public who feel they can cope without personal assistance and someone to listen .
25 What can be easier than for a manufacturer to limit his sales to those members of the public who fulfil the qualification of being this or doing that ?
26 Labour Councillors charge community charge payers an extra seventeen pound each for those members of the public that they have urged not to pay the community charge .
27 British restaurant cooking had been despaired of after fifteen years of siege conditions until the counter-attack of The Good Food Guide , founded in 1951 by Raymond Postgate , a pioneering bon vivant , and compiled by himself , his friends and any members of the public who could be bothered to write in with their recommendations ( one who did was a lion tamer ) .
28 In that case he said : As I understand it , the essence of this branch of law , whatever the origin of it may be , is that a person who has obtained information in confidence is not allowed to use it as a springboard for activities detrimental to the person who made the confidential communication , and springboard it remains even when all the features have been published or can be ascertained by actual inspection by any members of the public .
29 But they 're warning he should not be approached be any members of the public .
30 ‘ We need to trace any members of the public who know Mr McEvoy and in particular anybody who saw him yesterday evening . ’
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