Example sentences of "as [vb pp] by [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The danger , as ever , is that of trivialisation of the curriculum as received by pupils .
2 Vial is said to have published his proposals for a veterinary school in September 1788 , and also in October 1789 , and he had issued his plan ( perhaps as revised by Granville Penn ) in March 1790 .
3 ( b ) a recognised body which is an unlimited company shall retain its status as an unlimited company , save where the Council consents to the body being re-registered as limited by shares under the Companies Act 1985 ;
4 He hopes it will transform future productions , and demonstrate that the collected works of Shakespeare , rightly understood , provide a mythic corpus like that of the Mahabharata as treated by Peter Brook .
5 These changes can be seen as elements of a programme intended to open up more aspects of public sector provision to the market and to undermine the powers of state bureaucracy , particularly as highlighted by exponents of ‘ public choice theory ’ .
6 The underlying rationale of autrefois convict , as explained by Blackburn J. in Wemyss v. Hopkins , L.R. 10 Q.B .
7 Its purpose , as explained by Purchas L.J. , is to inform the contemnor of the precise reason for his committal to prison .
8 Let me say at once that there are formidable , and in my view insuperable , objections to a limitation closely modelled on the formula enunciated in Ex parte Blain , 12 Ch.D. 522 as explained by Lord Scarman in Clark v. Oceanic Contractors Inc. [ 1983 ] 2 A.C. 130 , 145 .
9 But he went on thinking of Angel 's religious logic , as explained by Tess .
10 No longer are spinning mills able to stand in isolation , they are , as explained by Andrew Steel ‘ In partnership with the Design Studio , exploring new frontiers of design and texture . ’
11 Most readers probably take it as explained by Tolkien 's preceding remark , ‘ To their man-children [ hobbits ] usually gave names that had no meaning at all in their daily language …
12 The historical reasons underlying the emergence of these principles , as explained by Dixon J. in Yerkey v. Jones , 63 C.L.R. 649 , may explain why cases , in which there had been no disposition of property by the surety wife but merely the acceptance by her of a contractual obligation to pay her husband 's debts , did not attract the same approach as the cases in which security over property had been given .
13 In my opinion , although there may be some difference in the wording of these sections , the position under section 236 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is broadly the same as that under section 268 of the Companies Act 1948 as explained by Buckley J. in In re Rolls Razor Ltd. [ 1968 ] 3 All E.R.
14 The position with regard to the residence of trustees and income tax is governed by general principles as altered by FA 1989 , s110 which in general applies for the year 1989/90 and subsequent years , ie it governs the position from 5 April 1989 .
15 On the other hand it is a mistake to think of the Zuwaya as differentiated by class : differences in wealth were not a basis for any marked or self-conscious social discrimination .
16 Of a certainty , the guide pulley wheel footings are of depth , as witnessed by Mr P. Durran , then the boy of nine years .
17 In the ( predominantly Catholic ) US Pacific territory of Guam , the island 's Legislature passed a highly restrictive anti-abortion law on March 9 , which explicitly challenged a woman 's constitutional right to abortion as recognized by Roe v. Wade .
18 Such transfers of mass and energy are fundamental features of cascading systems as recognized by Chorley and Kennedy ( 1971 ) but are capable of further emphasis .
19 International art , culture and politics , as immortalised by Pino Settanni , look down on us from the walls of the Hadrian Thomas gallery until 28 June .
20 As excavated by structuralism , the underlying order found , for example , in house layout , exchange relations or morality , may be reducible to certain basic patterns or transformations .
21 An action is defined as any proceedings in a county court which may be commenced as prescribed by plaint ( CCA , s 147(1) ) .
22 Two tablespoonsful , as prescribed by Florence Nightingale Crumwallis , the lady with the lamp and the face like a granite quarry . ’
23 The murder of the royal family , the ruthless repression of the enemies of the state and the establishment of Madame Guillotine ushered in not a glorious collectivist state as prescribed by Rousseau , but a ‘ reign of terror ’ .
24 As prescribed by Mme Guérigny , French cures were altogether different from English ones — and many , if not most , were adminis-tered at the back rather than the front end .
25 Levine contends that these tracts , even as they confidently sermonize on the fixed nature of identity , especially gender identity as prescribed by God and signified through dress difference , display a deep anxiety that identity is not fixed ; that , underneath , the self is really nothing at all ( ‘ Men in Women 's Clothing ’ , 126 and 128 ) .
26 a dangerous dog , as defined by section 1 of the dangerous dogs act 1991 , in a private car which was on a public highway was in a public place , within the meaning of section 10(2) of the act and was therefore required to be muzzled and on a lead as prescribed by section 1(2) ( d ) of the act .
27 This result is indistinguishable from the 841Myr eruption age of the Bultfontein kimberlite at Kimberley , as given by Rb-Sr analyses of the phlogopites from MARID and related metasomatized nodules .
28 There is a specific product which has falling average costs throughout the relevant output range as given by demand .
29 The concentration of crystals reaches the critical value , as given by equation ( 1 ) , and a discrete sedimentation event follows .
30 The vertical distance between the marginal social cost MSC and the marginal social benefit as given by DD shows the marginal social loss of producing the last output unit .
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