Example sentences of "a [noun] in [conj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ( 5 ) Interest is not taxable whether it forms part of a judgment debt or a payment in or a settlement ( Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988 , s329 ) .
2 Does he agree that to stimulate demand within the United Kingdom home market , where problems exist on the retail side , the industry is entitled to expect some special attention from the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the next Budget , which could include a reduction in or the total elimination of the appalling 10 per cent .
3 Certainly , but that displacement can only occur it if is also a struggle in and for representation — specifically , the representation of the repetition as re-presentation/inversion/displacement of the norm .
4 The availability of such services plays a part in whether an old person is able to stay at home .
5 The person doing it does have scientific training , and the MD is more difficult than a PhD in that the supervisor does not take part in the examination .
6 There was another advantage late on a lunch-time in that there were always a few city slickers who had ventured north by north-west ( of the Barbican ) to try the Hoskin 's or the Holden 's bitter and found it had got the better of them , so needed a taxi back to civilization .
7 ‘ A big part of my game is to get a foot in and let others know I 'm around , ’ explained Ince .
8 The UBR also represented a change in that the ‘ poundage rate ’ under this scheme was now set by central government and not by the local authority .
9 When issuing the FBL , the FIATA freight forwarder acts as a carrier in that he concludes a contract for a combined or multi-modal transport with the shipper , and contracts or sub-contracts for the carriage with one or more carriers .
10 But of course he was right about the trouser bit because Nan had a gay disposition and a very pretty face ; what he would n't admit to was that she brought in a lot of custom at the week-end , especially when there was a boat in and some of the sailors would make their way up from the quayside and spend freely on chocolate or toffee for their girls .
11 He gives a definite shape to a side in that he gets his hands on the ball and keeps moving forward .
12 Combining equations ( 4.1 ) and ( 4.4 ) — ( 4.6 ) and solving for the equilibrium price in the th market gives This equation is not yet a true solution for p ( ) t since it contains a term in and , as we have emphasized , a rational expectation is one formed in accordance with the true process or solution for the variable concerned .
13 The metaphysical construction of subjectivity is at once an admission and production of its disruptive potential , a disruption in and of the very terms of its construction .
14 Barns were supposed to have hay in them — they did in the movies — where the hero could hide while the baddies , with a total disregard for blood poisoning or spread HIV , jabbed a pitchfork in and out like a demented barman trying to get the last maraschino out of the bottle .
15 I took my Sony from a drawer , slotted a tape in and pressed the record button .
16 Gooch , though , England 's loyal and reliable banker , went for his second modest score of the match , a choker of a dismissal in that he was held down at second slip at 3.43pm , three minutes into interval time .
17 The Plaintiff relies on proprietary estoppel the principle of which , in its broadest form , may be stated as follows ; where one person , A , has acted to his detriment on the faith of a belief , which was known to and encouraged by another person , B , that he either has or is going to be given a right in or over B 's property , B can not insist on his strict legal rights if to do so would be inconsistent with A 's belief .
18 There was a complication in that the companies and shareholders had previously made various unspecified claims against one of the banks .
19 Just as with the Rogallo wing , or the single cone scoops , any lateral shift of the Flexifoil will steer the kite ; but there is a difference in that the single line attachment point allows the Flexifoil to adopt its own twist , and the angle of attack is reduced on the inside of the turn .
20 Because Jo 's father was English and Lorna Lewis gave many interviews explaining that the secret of keeping a marriage together in Hollywood was to make sure your husband was the king of his own home , they had chosen a house built in English baronial style , with walls mantled with ivy , black exposed timbers , fireplaces big enough to hold a conference in and small diamond-paned windows through which the sun streamed defiantly in brilliant narrow shafts .
21 These people who lived in , ha they had a shop in as well .
22 ( 3 ) The purposes referred to in subsection ( 2 ) above are : ( a ) the sale or supply to persons taking table meals in the premises of alcoholic liquor supplied in a part of the premises usually set apart for the service of such persons , and supplied for consumption by such a person in that part of the premises as an ancillary to his meal ; and ( b ) the consumption of alcoholic liquor so supplied .
23 ( 3 ) The purposes referred to in subsection ( 2 ) above are : ( a ) the sale or supply to persons taking table meals in the premises of alcoholic liquor supplied in a part of the premises usually set apart for the service of such persons , and supplied for consumption by such a person in that part of the premises as an ancillary to his meal ; and ( b ) the consumption of alcoholic liquor so supplied .
24 ( ii ) [ repealed 1981 c. 23 , Sched. 4. ] ( 2 ) While this section applies to any premises , the effect shall be that for the purposes mentioned in subsection ( 3 ) below there shall be permitted hours in those premises on Sundays , such permitted hours being the period between half-past twelve and half-past two in the afternoon and the period between half-past six and eleven in the evening ( 3 ) The purposes referred to in subsection ( 2 ) above are : ( a ) the sale or supply to persons taking table meals in the premises of alcoholic liquor supplied in a part of the premises usually set apart for the service of such persons , and supplied for consumption by such a person in that part of the premises as an ancillary to his meal ; and ( b ) the consumption of alcoholic liquor so supplied .
25 This Clause shall not apply to injury to a person in or on a vehicle , other than a motor vehicle , liability for which injury is not covered by the Policy of the Insurer of such vehicle .
26 This woman may be technically a virgin in that she has never experienced intercourse , either with the father of this infant or anyone else .
27 The youthful population ebbed and surged like a floodtide in and out of public houses and discos .
28 Kev & Co had similar ticketting problems but managed to find time to fit a pint in as well .
29 1.13 Our fundamental assumption is that all pupils are entitled to an education that will provide the opportunity for them to develop to the best of their abilities a competence in and appreciation of English .
30 The institutions offer a service in that they train graduates whom many large employers and some small ones recruit , often on the basis of a degree — content , quality and grade .
  Next page