Example sentences of "[prep] [art] [adj] exceptions [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Thus , if O were not the owner but had , for example stolen the car ( or bought it from someone who had stolen it ) then the true owner ( i. e. from whom the car was stolen ) will still have good title ( i. e. unless one of the other exceptions to the nemo dat principle applies ) .
2 However , if the bailor was not the owner but had , for example , stolen them before leaving them for repair or treatment , etc. then the true owner will still have good title ( i.e. unless one of the other exceptions to the nemo dat principle applies ) .
3 In response , the stores appear first to have sought the protection of one of the specified exceptions to the prohibition in section 47 , viz. the sale of motor accessories .
4 The Act also contains guidance for the courts as to the factors which they should take into account in deciding whether any of the statutory exceptions to the presumption in favour of bail apply in a particular case .
5 Large wooded areas are rare in Pembrokeshire due to the strong winds and salt spray , but Cwm Gwaun , a few miles east of Fishguard , is one of the notable exceptions to the rule .
6 By 1985 the average had dropped but the spread was narrower , with a few exceptions at the extremes ( the Manchester Evening News with 300,000 and the Darlington Evening Echo with 12,000 ) .
7 With a few exceptions along the coast ( such as Seaford in the 1770s ) it proved more or less impossible in Sussex where the land was largely enclosed already and the soil of much of the county ill-suited to highly profitable wheat farming ; so there was little of the trauma produced elsewhere by the restructuring of the rural landscape .
8 France , we would add , had few long-established private sector companies in communications ‘ software ’ or ‘ hardware ’ that enjoyed a significant international market presence : Hachette ( 1826 ) , Havas ( 1832–5 ) — in publishing and distribution on the one hand , and in news and advertising on the other — and the CGE ( 1911 ) , in electrical goods , number among the rare exceptions to the rule .
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