Example sentences of "that [art] [adj] party " in BNC.

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1 Says Renate Olins , director of the London Marriage Guidance Council , ‘ It 's entirely understandable that the innocent party is wracked with feelings of such vehemence and passion that she may not know what to do with them . ’
2 In Chase Manhattan Bank NA v Israel-British Bank NA [ 1981 ] Ch 105 , a civil case , it was held that the innocent party to an overpayment retains an equitable right where the overpayment was brought about by a mistake of fact .
3 If we take the Prime Minister 's words at face value — that the Conserservative party will not raise the rate of VAT — does the hon. Gentleman recall an interview given recently by the Chief Secretary , when he was asked about extending coverage of VAT to transport fares ?
4 This interdepartmental Committee on the Medical Inspection and Feeding of Children Attending Public Elementary Schools was appointed in March 1905 and was , in the words of the minister responsible , Lord Londonderry , ( President of the Board of Education ) not to be ‘ at liberty to make far-reaching proposals that the Unionist party would decline to support ’ .
5 In the end a meaningless compromise was made , and the Conference called on all good men to come together to resist socialism , but also insisted that the Unionist party should not sacrifice any of its independence in the process .
6 The first requires proof of negligence , the second does not require that fault be established but does require that the injured party prove that damage was caused by someone 's action .
7 Results from Cambodia 's election suggested that the royalist party , FUNCINPEC , had won , with 46% of the vote , compared with the ruling Cambodian People 's Party 's 38% .
8 353 the parties to an arbitration had agreed beforehand that the successful party should have costs on the High Court scale .
9 It is not necessarily the case that the successful party will receive costs from the losing party which will cover the whole of the solicitor 's bill .
10 It may be that the guilty party is a Member in which case expulsion ( as in the Garry Allighan case above , p.80 ) may be the punishment .
11 That the guilty party will remain undetected ? ’
12 Surely , too , it must be from within the group of American tourists , plus their tutors and their guide , that the guilty party was to be sought .
13 Some critics might favour the pragmatic solution of convicting both , to ensure that the guilty party does not escape justice .
14 Mr Silviu Brucan , a leading member of the front , was reported as saying yesterday that the Communist Party was now finished and had played no part in the revolution — despite increasing complaints , particularly from students at the centre of the uprising , that most of those moving into power were party members .
15 This began before the war , from the time of the Munich agreement in 1938 , for it was then that the Communist Party was made illegal .
16 The unanswered question , of course , is why is it a matter simply of judicial notice that the Communist Party of the 1980s is subversive ?
17 The almost immediate effect of the outbreak of war in 1939 , following the almost entirely unexpected Nazi-Soviet pact , was that the Communist party , in France as in Vietnam , announced its opposition to the ‘ imperialist ’ war and , in both countries , this was followed by swift government repression .
18 He may have believed , and was encouraged to think , that the Communist party would win the coming election in France and form , or at least be made part of , a new government ; and the Russian advice seems to have been to hold on and to wait for ‘ democratic France ’ and its ‘ progressive forces ’ to support the cause of colonial liberation .
19 At least , one may take this assumption from the terms which the French emissary Paul Mus , after an arduous journey , presented to Ho in May 1947 and which required what amounted to a conditional surrender ; and in any case now that the Communist Party had been ousted from the French government there was no longer the same effective demand in France for a negotiated settlement .
20 You did say that the Communist Party to state power .
21 Five years after the revolution Lenin complained that the Communist Party had good political control only over the top echelons of the vast bureaucracy : ‘ Down below , however , there are hundreds of thousands of old officials who came to us from the Tsar and from bourgeois society and who , sometimes consciously and sometimes unconsciously , work against us ’ ( quoted in Merkl , 1977 , pp. 166–7 ) .
22 After months of discussion it was proposed on Oct. 10 that the Communist Party ( PCI ) , founded in 1921 , should be renamed the Democratic Party of the Left ( Partito Democratico della Sinistra — PDS ) .
23 The reasons towards this sh erm the reason why that you had the rise in er absolute egalitarianism was that the Communist Party thought that they 'd be able to keep the speed up for the process of land reform .
24 However this radicalization in land policy had allowed them to defeat the K M T and essentially led them to get into power so one has elements of pragmatism in their ideology and that how that you 've got to realize that the Communist Party was in a very precarious situation throughout these years , that how that although they did have a kind of er policy in th there ultimate aim of socialism , and although it seare appeared s quite strange that they were almost promoting capitalism , that how that their aim during this period was to eliminate feudalism which was the s and then to establish capitalism in order that socialism could take place .
25 necessarily calling for radicalization cos it was forced erm I , I , it appeared to me that how that the Communist Party would have continued a moderate policy had the peasants not erm been demanding further radical change and in actual fact the tone of the document 's quite moderate and it 's protecting middle peasants , rich peasants , even some landlords who had remained loyal to the Party so it 's not at all radical but erm it 's just it 's radical in the sense that how that it wants to get rid of feudalism , but it 's not getting rid of landlords per se as a class .
26 But it 's also fears that the Party itself is becoming too radical too , they always want to control two elements and I mean on the last page , point number sixteen it says that how that erm tt that how that the Communist Party members ought to refrain from securing undue benefits by taking advantage of their leading position .
27 Erm no what coming out of this is that how that although one would assume in the south that the peasants ought to be more revolutionary , in actual fact it 's the reverse and why is this happening , is it because of the fact that the Communist Party were in the n that maybe essentially that the peasants in China er were reactionary and worked within the confines of moral economy , but because of the presence of the Communist Party in the north they became more revolutionary and that 's sort of suggested by the success of land reform there and the fact that how , that they ca n't implement it in the south .
28 Now tt if you look at it this way , le let's suppose that the Communist Party was successful in its military campaign and it , it takes military control of south China , which it was beginning to then , and did up to nineteen forty eight
29 And it just goes to show that the Communist Party were very forward looking but
30 R. Page Arnot , another delegate , held that the Communist Party had every prospect of becoming the new mass working-class party .
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