Example sentences of "to be within [art] " in BNC.

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1 Unless the court otherwise orders , an affidavit may be used notwithstanding that it contains statements of information or belief , but every affidavit shall state which of the facts deposed to are within the deponent 's knowledge and which are based on information or belief and shall give , in the former case , his means of knowledge and , in the latter case , the sources and grounds of the information or belief ( Ord 20 , r 10 ) .
2 Far more important was the fact that this baby girl , born two weeks after the defeat of a Scottish army by the English at Solway Moss , and at a time when her remarkable father James V was lying burnt out at the age of thirty in his glorious hunting-lodge at Falkland , was to be within a week of her birth queen of the Scots .
3 In addition , every stone circle in England and Wales was found to be within a mile ( 1.5 km ) of a surface fault or on an associated intrusion .
4 Erm in year one growth is expected to be within a targeted range up to two and a half percent .
5 This is so irrespective of whether the contract had a fixed future date for delivery or whether delivery was to be within a reasonable length of time .
6 It was proposed to build a railway ‘ Halt ’ specifically for the Depot along the South Gate railway bridge , allowing workers from outlying districts to be within a minute 's walk of the Depot Gate .
7 Its guidlines state that the bypass would have to be within a hundred yards of the road or the conditions intolerable before the property would be bought , though the Judge Mr Justice Latham said that in his view those guidelines were a shambles .
8 It could be that a firm may only be able to say with any certainty that it expects the rate of return on an investment project to be within a particular range , say 10 to 15 per cent .
9 The book gives you a clear insight into the complexities of piloting a fast jet at low altitude , keeping tabs on exactly where you are and planning on the wing exactly where you want to be within an acceptable tolerance at a checkpoint of plus or minus five seconds .
10 A small house , oval in shape , was found to be within an earlier and larger stone-built structure dug into sand-dunes ; beneath the floor there was a complex of post holes .
11 Any ambitions we have have got to be within the terms of those realities . ’
12 Counsel for the ‘ Seventeen Towns ’ , claimed by Finch to be within the forest bounds , produced in rebuttal the perambulations of 1298 and 1300 , and their confirmation by Act of Parliament in 1336 , urging also that these towns had been out of the forest by ‘ the long and constant Usage ever since .
13 No places were to be taken to be within the forest if no Forest courts had been held , verderers elected or regards made in them since 1565 .
14 It is constantly compared with the ancient rock paintings in the Lascaux caves , which happen to be within the breed 's native region .
15 Taking the present temperature gradient of 15°F per 1000 ft ( 28°C per km ) measured in the Larne-2 borehole as representative of the post-Triassic history of the area , it is estimated that where source rocks now occur beneath the Permo-Triassic of the Larne and Lough Neagh basins at depths in excess of about 11,000 feet , they would be expected to be within the gas zone with their coals generating abundant methane .
16 Curriculum workers are resolutely opposed to excluding content and approaches which they know , with good teaching , to be within the grasp of a fair percentage of the nation 's children .
17 Learned perceptions and actions have to be within the overall confines of a creature 's mind structure .
18 The BC109C was selected as it claims to have a spread from 380 to 800 at 2mA and is more likely to be within the spec we require .
19 They are therefore expected to be within the visual focus when children watch the teacher 's face and lips .
20 In Britain there was a significant reduction in the number of employees eligible for employment protection , so that to be within the terms of the Employment Protection Act , they had to be working for two years instead of , as previously , six months .
21 I was careful to explain my own attitude to commissioned work — that in order for me to work it would have to be within the broadest of limitations .
22 The interpretation of this would appear to be within the competence of the state of origin , and it is to be hoped that an interpretation reflecting the realities of the position would always be adopted ; what is important to the defendant is prompt access to the information he needs in order to judge how to respond to the current move by the other party .
23 Assuming a treaty to be within the authority of the protecting State , should a claim be brought against it or the protected State ?
24 To prevent failures of this order , even if success was not absolutely assured , might , other things being equal , have seemed to be within the scope of US policy at the time .
25 Allan Rodway and Mark Roberts , for example , argue that certain authors require " too mature a taste " to be within the reach of " any but the exceptional undergraduate " .
26 The US contribution of $70 million is likely to come from a NASA programme to support international collaboration , and the overall cost to the European agency is estimated to be within the budget of £260 million .
27 To be within the sections a transaction must possess certain features .
28 Policy H Seven applies in the event of Skelton being an inset area when any development would have to be within the settlement , and no more than small-scale , precluding D thirty nine and D forty .
29 Their music is simple enough to be within the competence of an average choir , yet has the melodic , harmonic and rhythmic interest which gives satisfaction and enjoyment both to singers and to congregations .
30 This is a remarkable development and leads to a sharp distinction according to whether the alleged improper trading practice can be shown to be within the purview of the Treaty as affecting ‘ trade between member states . ’
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