Example sentences of "refer [prep] [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 The ‘ organisation man ’ picture is largely that referred to by the novelists we reviewed in Chapter 1 .
2 The case law upon this point has already been examined and should be referred to for the purposes of the discussion which follows .
3 A design often found on enssi rugs , which were traditionally used as door-hangings in the nomad 's yurt ( tent ) ; it is quite common for any rug woven in this design to be referred to as an enssi , or a Bokhara with an enssi design .
4 People who know their animals well have a strong sense of what they are going to do next from what is referred to as the animals ' ‘ body language ’ .
5 Advised by campaign strategist James Darville , often referred to as the Democrats ' Lee Atwater ( Bush 's 1988 strategist ) , Wofford avoided overly close identification with black interests and denounced racial-preference job tests .
6 It is sometimes referred to as the mahi or " fish-in-the-pond " design ( mahi being the Persian word for fish ) , because many traditional sources have cited this as its symbolic origin .
7 ‘ These institutions instil and cultivate in their cadets what were once commonly referred to as the virtues of southern manhood — honour , chivalry and devotion to God , state and family , ’ wrote one alumnus in a letter to a newspaper .
8 Prior to the 1970s most banks relied on their networks of overseas correspondent banks ( sometimes referred to as the banks ' own banking system ) to meet customer needs as regards international trade payments and finance .
9 The ICAEW recognises that many of the detailed provisions , designed with the individual private investor in mind , may not be appropriate for the experienced or corporate client ( referred to under the regulations as ‘ corporate finance clients ’ ) .
10 Marxist-based studies of crime are sometimes referred to under the titles of radical or critical criminology .
11 The transactions just referred to of the executors , his assignees , in relation to the lease bind him , in my judgment , in a question with the plaintiff as if they had been carried out by himself .
12 Always referred to by the locals as ‘ the Spanish ’ , they had their own school ( where the Hotel Monte Carlo is now situated ) and the New Year 's Eve parties here were particularly popular .
13 Thousands of workers lost their jobs , and the railways ' staffing needs were met by an influx of combatants who had fought on the nationalist side in the civil war ; a war that was commonly referred to by the victors , and indeed in RENFE documents of this period , as the ‘ war of national liberation ’ .
14 Again it is not merely the experiencing of the occurrence of each of these events on a number of occasions which is expressed , but rather what is known about the persons referred to by the subjects of these sentences as the result of either experience or receiving information about them from some other source .
15 This crucial element in Morgan 's evidence is an illusion and there is not the slightest shred of evidence that those societies where large numbers of people can be referred to by the terms for parent are societies where marriage is either more or less individualistic .
16 The relevance of his role as priest ( referred to by the expressions Priest , a dissident … priest , the priest 's ) is presumably as a priest of the Roman Catholic Church of which the Pope is Head .
17 One of these , often referred to by the police , is the unrealistic fear that many people , particularly the elderly , have of their society .
18 Section 231 requires information specified in Schedule 5 to be given in notes to the accounts regarding what are referred to in the headings to the section and the Schedule as ‘ related undertakings ’ — an expression which the Act does not define but which includes parent and subsidiary undertakings , associated undertakings , joint ventures , and undertakings in which the company has a substantial holding .
19 Any matters referred to in the replies , which will need to be taken into account on completion — eg details of the title deeds that will be handed over , the standard requisition as to production of last receipts , a requirement that an outstanding mortgage should be discharged on or before completion , an undertaking of some sort to be given on completion — should be marked " Completion " so that when you come to prepare your completion agenda , these matters can at once be picked out , and no further lengthy perusal of the replies will be needed .
20 It soon became apparent that a crucial factor was the readiness of interviewees to take up areas referred to in the questions .
21 There are ancillary definitions in clause 1 and in clauses 2–5 which are referred to in the notes .
22 I do not know whether there are 10 members of the management committee or only seven , as is referred to in the notes on clauses .
23 Finally , the plaintiffs contended , the documents referred to in the sub-paragraphs of the order which Wright J. set aside are clearly documents which show the state of the trust and therefore are trust documents .
24 Following the recent House of Lords decision of Pepper v Hart [ 1992 ] STC 898 it is possible to refer to Hansard in certain circumstances and it is felt that it is proper to refer to the relevant Hansard to discover who the individual is referred to in the provisions .
25 From 1968 onwards Nicaragua was repeatedly referred to in the Reports of the Court to the General Assembly as a State that had accepted the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court , and the United Nations Secretariat had made similar listings .
26 But basic biographical details which are referred to in the letters often receive no mention in the main text .
27 The following cases are referred to in the judgments :
28 No cases are referred to in the judgments or were cited in argument .
29 The following cases are referred to in the judgments :
30 The following cases are referred to in the judgments :
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