Example sentences of "in one [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In one subject intubation failed at the second study , and in the other five subjects basal acid output was 0 to 2.2 mEq/h ( mean 0.55 ) and stimulated acid output rose to between 0.1 and 1.2 mEq/h ( mean 0.68 ) .
2 There 's bound to be some rub-off , but I like to maintain a balance so that at least in one subject area of the school the children feel they can contribute something of themselves , and the work therefore becomes meaningful for them , as opposed to working from a set format , like an art school ; end-product , colour exercise and the rest of it .
3 As the group consisted of both biology and physics teachers , the regular meetings ensured that good classroom practice and many teaching strategies which were successful in one subject area could be incorporated or modified in the other .
4 Advanced course units would then be taken , with a combination of twelve of them in one subject area leading to an honours degree , twelve in two subjects to a joint honours , and various other ‘ less demanding combinations ’ to ordinary degrees :
5 The school library is a major part of the information environment in the school and the school librarian , in her/his neutral position , can ensure that Prestel is used across the curriculum and not only in one subject area .
6 Some programs are subject specific i.e. concentrate on developing skills and concepts in one subject area such as geography .
7 An aspect of investment services , is , however , not clear : whether the home member state or the host member state should regulate the conduct of business of a branch in one member state which is established by a financial institution authorised in another member state .
8 A single market can not be said to exist unless companies incorporated in one member state are permitted to do business in another .
9 Whereas the right of establishment entitles a company incorporated in one member state to set up agencies , branches and subsidiaries , without discrimination on grounds of nationality , in the territory of another , the purpose of the freedom to provide services is to enable a company established in one member state to do business in the territory of another without setting up agencies , branches or subsidiaries , and indeed without complying with all the rules and regulations of the second state , as explained below .
10 Whereas the right of establishment entitles a company incorporated in one member state to set up agencies , branches and subsidiaries , without discrimination on grounds of nationality , in the territory of another , the purpose of the freedom to provide services is to enable a company established in one member state to do business in the territory of another without setting up agencies , branches or subsidiaries , and indeed without complying with all the rules and regulations of the second state , as explained below .
11 Secondly , companies established in one member state and providing services in another through intermediaries may actually enjoy a legal advantage over companies doing business in the latter state through agencies , branches or subsidiaries .
12 In another series of cases the Court has condemned national laws which require undertakings which are licensed to carry out particular activities in one member state having to obtain a second licence to provide the same services in another member state where the licensing requirements in the first member state adequately safeguard all necessary requirements for the protection of the public interest .
13 One reason why companies established in one member state are entitled to do business in another without setting up a permanent place of business in that state is that such a requirement might unreasonably inflate their costs .
14 For example , goods lawfully produced in one member state need not necessarily comply with all the technical standards applied in the various member states into which they are imported ( such as the German prohibition on the sale of beer containing even harmless artificial additives ) .
15 The right of establishment granted by Community law includes a right for a company incorporated in one member state ( the home member state ) to establish a branch in another member state ( the host member state ) .
16 The right of establishment also gives companies incorporated in one member state the right to establish agencies or subsidiaries in other member states .
17 Equal access The primary objective of the EC rules with which we are here concerned is to allow companies situated in one member state to provide services across national boundaries , or , if they wish , to set up agencies , branches or subsidiaries in other member states .
18 Whenever a company in one member state seeks to do business in another , whether by establishing a physical presence in the second state or not , Community law defines the conditions for equal access to the market of that state .
19 Under these provisions , stock exchanges in one member state will have to accept listing particulars approved by the responsible competent authority in another .
20 The Eleventh Company Law Directive deals with the disclosures , including accounting documents , which have to be made by branches established in one member state of companies registered in another member state or outside the European Community .
21 Some of the European Court of Justice 's opinions can be quite ‘ woolly ’ and do leave themselves open to a wider interpretation , but I do not believe that the opinion was meant to be interpreted so widely as to provide for an auditor recognised in one member state to practise in a second member state without any requirement to obtain local authorisation .
22 The draft directive seeks to remove any national barriers preventing pension scheme administrators in one member state from employing an authorised investment manager in another , or limiting the investment of a pension fund 's assets to the securities of the member state concerned .
23 It would therefore seem unfair if generous funds in one member state were plundered by artists from other , less well-endowed countries .
24 Article 57 of the Treaty of Rome as amended by the Maastricht Treaty requires the Council to issue directives for ‘ the mutual recognition of diplomas , certificates and other evidence of formal qualification ’ so that anyone who qualifies in one member state is allowed to work freely in another .
25 Apart from harmonizing measures formulated for the purpose of establishing a common market , whose regulators will have a keen interest in acts in one member State that can produce effects in others , most harmonization instruments dealing with contracts are confined to international transactions .
26 If vessels registered in one member state could freely change to the flag of another member state and , as a result , obtain access to the quotas of that state , the aim of the quota system , which was to ensure a fair distribution of the available fisheries resources among the member states for the benefit of their fishing regions and industries allied thereto , would be frustrated .
27 I consider that , for the provision of a service within the meaning of article 59 to be involved in the sea-fishing sector , there must be an operation carried out by a national established in one member state for a recipient established in another member state by means of a fishing vessel registered in the first state .
28 In other words , goods produced in one member state would be able to enter and compete in other member state markets , free of all obstacles and barriers .
29 The Right of Establishment relates not merely to a situation where a parent bank in one member state sets up a subsidiary in another , but also to situations where a parent in one state sets up a branch in another state .
30 Court of Justice rulings have stressed the general principle that goods which have been legally marketed in one member state should normally be freely admitted to others .
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