Example sentences of "fully [verb] the [noun] of " in BNC.

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1 Importing authorities , on the other hand , have complained that the cross-boundary flow adjustment does not fully compensate for the actual workload since , by using average costs , it does not fully cover the costs of treating high-cost cases .
2 Even Bevan reckoned that if the Labour Party were to campaign on a programme fully reflecting the aspirations of the rank and file party activists ‘ we could say goodbye to any Labour government being elected again in Britain' .
3 He is there as the only one who fully understands the problems of both Elgar and his Wife , but plays no part in the other activities .
4 No one fully understands the workings of these interlocking systems and we may forgive ourselves for having a sensation of something slipping through our fingers when we try to grasp them — but one thing is certain : the choices we make about the order of the information in discourse reveal our own assumptions about the world and about the people we are trying to communicate with .
5 It may be necessary for an Investment Business Client to be accompanied to meetings by legal advisers so that we can be sure that the Client fully understands the implications of the issues and advice being discussed .
6 Most people inhabit this in-between land , perhaps not fully accepting the concept of reincarnation but none the less thinking that ‘ there must be something there ’ .
7 In this section , we adopt the view that there is some truth in all of these approaches , but that no one of them can fully explain the causes of unemployment .
8 In this section , we adopt the view that there is some truth in all of these theories , but that no one of them can fully explain the causes of inflation .
9 It is doubtful whether Asquith fully assimilated the shift of allegiance which this letter quietly announced .
10 But these points did not fully answer the question of his motives .
11 It is a year since the General Election , and as the chairman of the Scottish executive , Anne McGuire , observed at Labour 's conference in Inverness , the party has not fully realised the implications of that defeat .
12 The first tends to refer mainly to the military context which , while obviously important , is not what this book is about ; and the second is clearly state-centrist , and does not fully convey the scnse of hegemony where it does not directly involve the state , which I take to be crucial .
13 A statement from R U C headquarters tonight says that no words can fully convey the feeling of the force and all decent people at the manner of the murder .
14 Well aware that most workers were indifferent to foreign affairs , he fully expected the majority of them to be swept into fratricide by patriotic propaganda if war actually came .
15 It is impossible , for instance , to fully imitate the practice of making political speeches that analyse , summarise and comment upon a social situation without also developing the abstract skills that such practice entails .
16 Arago fully disclosed the details of the Daguerreotype process at a joint session of the French Academies of the Sciences and the Fine Arts on 19 August 1839 .
17 Few buyers in any event fully realise the extent of their cleaning materials purchases as the various items are distributed amongst diverse cost centres and attributed budgets .
18 I just hope that the Merit Table representatives fully realise the implications of the stand they are taking , ’ said a WRU spokesman .
19 However we fully realise the importance of people in those landscapes .
20 The Bank of England did not appear to have fully considered the problems of financial change at the introduction of the Medium Term Financial Strategy ( MTFS ) .
21 The first paragraph reads — ‘ The Sub Committee have fully considered the question of the formation of the Club and are anxious to devise a scheme by which eventually the Links may become the absolute property of the Members of the Golf Club .
22 Routine metabolic screening of urine does not fully guarantee the absence of an oxidative phosphorylation disorder .
23 After all we are only half way through this year 's Charity of the Year programme and there is still a long way to go if we are to raise enough to fully fund the training of a Macmillan Nurse .
24 Nevertheless it is worth citing some instances where the continual use of one or a very few gestures can fully describe the feelings of some characters and convey their reactions to the circumstances of the plot or theme .
25 A number of other models have been suggested for the development of scientific knowledge , but these models are measuring the concomitants of scientific growth — the manpower , costs , publications , citations , etc — and none has so far been developed to fully describe the growth of knowledge itself , although Goffman 's work seems to have some predictive value .
26 As there is no provision either for fully protecting the interests of fund members , the Government 's proposed regulation on self-investment is irrelevant to what has been revealed in respect of the MGN pension fund .
27 This approach has enormously suggestive potential for analysis of listening , for it fully accepts the significance of new perceptual attitudes and situations while by-passing or at least putting in question the usual , too easy Adorn Ian assumptions of passivity .
28 The provision of the services already described is important , but this must take place in a society that fully accepts the implications of disability , otherwise the disabled feel they are rejected and discriminated against .
29 The discussions over the Mutual Aid Agreement in early 1942 fully recognised the importance of full employment .
30 The British War Cabinet fully recognised the implications of this , and the likelihood that many would be executed as traitors or sentenced to long terms in prison camps .
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