Example sentences of "to in the [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 Explain , with specific examples if possible , how the other factors referred to in the first paragraph ( such as changes in what the law counts as crime , fluctuations in the vigour of the application of the law ) determine or influence the criminal statistics .
2 But how do you know who to talk to in the first place ?
3 And erm I ca I came to in the first place because it was the best teaching hospital in the Midlands at that time .
4 ‘ I did n't steal anything from you , and what you lost , you had no right to in the first place . ’
5 you 're not too sure what he wants , he 's agreed to see you next week , he does n't know why he 's seeing you but you go back and you present , so try and overcome rejection but the thing was he wants to in the first place .
6 Before we talk about the er er getting to the purpose of our meeting , erm , how long were you , how did you come to in the first place ?
7 erm is not talking to in the first place
8 There 's little Bill Ward has n't turned his hand to in the first sixty years … from Tragic opera … to Singing puppets
9 And we really have to in the first instance , get public opinion to realise the way in which our lives are so pervasively subject to criminal prosecution , that 's the first step .
10 These are all the potential problems we are exposed to in the twentieth century .
11 The Landlord demises to the Tenant the Premises Together with the rights specified in the second Schedule but Excepting and reserving to the Landlord the rights specified in the third Schedule To hold the Premises to the Tenant for the Contractual Term Subject to all rights easements privileges restrictions covenants and stipulations of whatever nature affecting the Premises [ including the matters contained or referred to in the seventh Schedule ] Yielding and paying to the Landlord :
12 The difficulty here lies in what " this " refers to in the second sentence .
13 Declarations similar to those referred to in the last paragraph have also been made in this context .
14 And we now know that these ghastly effects are the results of what we referred to in the last lecture endotoxins .
15 And in determining what is suitable they must have regard to the matters referred to in the last three lines of the substituted subsection .
16 This sort of analysis is substantially similar to Jakobson 's discussion of Poe 's ‘ Raven ’ ( Sebeok 1971 : 371–2 ) , which I referred to in the last chapter , and it may well be that the New Critics ' influence lay behind Jakobson 's arguments there .
17 There 's the firstly that of young children , and it 's something that I remember putting a motion to in the last administration about a creche or whatever or looking into this facility , in the fact of erm , trying to encourage more people with young families to erm , actually get involved in local government and politics .
18 In the case of unregistered title the husband 's solicitors will , therefore , submit a copy of the last conveyance , mortgage ( if any ) , any sales-off or other transactions , together with copies of any covenants referred to in the last conveyance , to the new husband 's solicitors who will themselves submit a draft conveyance .
19 Some of the wacky and wonderful things people got up to in the last ITV Telethon 2 years ago .
20 Those are the two other issues that I want to get on to in the last part of the programme .
21 After damage in the Fourth Crusade it was further restored and added to in the fourteenth century ( 192 ) .
22 What does all this refer to in the third sentence ?
23 ‘ In applying the national law and in particular the provisions of a national law specifically introduced in order to implement Directive 76/207 , national courts are required to interpret their national law in the light of the wording and the purpose of the directive in order to achieve the result referred to in the third paragraph of Article 189 .
24 The words " in relation to " referred to in the third limb do not appear in the section but it seems to the author that the reference to " any benefit to him by contract or otherwise " must relate in some way to the gifted property , and a conclusion along those lines seems to have been drawn in some of the old estate duty cases ( see Chick v Commissioners of Stamp Duties [ 1958 ] AC 435 at 447 ) .
25 What is the ‘ point ’ referred to in the third sentence ?
26 Maybe the situation referred to in the next letter is worse than we thought !
27 This is an important point which will be returned to in the next chapter .
28 Where the pupils referred to in the next section are concerned , their teachers seem to play a larger role in the arbitration of proper action .
29 These are mere speculations but they are , in fact , no more so than some of the anti-welfare state ‘ theses ’ referred to in the next chapter .
30 This picture is added to in the next chapter where we examine the informal relations that exist within organisations , and in Chapter 6 where we examine power .
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