Example sentences of "account for the [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Principals of firms operating mainly from overseas offices are not taken into account for the purposes of calculating the premium payable by an MNP for indemnity insurance and the fee income from all overseas practice is excluded from the computations .
2 It will clearly be in the interest of the headtenant if the service charge is left out of account for the purposes of the rent review under the headlease .
3 IHTA 1984 , s18(2) states that if immediately before a transfer the transferor ( but not the transferor 's spouse ) is domiciled in the United Kingdom , the value in respect of which the transfer is exempt shall not exceed £55,000 less any amount previously taken into account for the purposes of that exemption .
4 It is likely that such shares ( and their acquisition ) will be taken into account for the purposes of the rule ( note to Rule 36 ) .
5 A summary of the results accounting for the differences in expressed PLC activities is shown in Fig. 2 a ; this shows that the net increase in inositol phosphate formation induced by βγ t was about fivefold higher for cells expressing PLC- β2 than for cells expressing PLC- β1 .
6 Whilst Wallis ' notion of ‘ cultural defence ’ has been utilised here in addition to , rather than in place of , Gusfield 's notion of ‘ status defence ’ in accounting for the activities of the NVALA , Wallis ' explanation is perhaps not as comprehensive as it might be .
7 They merely supplement them , as the original qualities of food supplement the effects of cooking in accounting for the properties of the finished dish .
8 ‘ Thereby accounting for the jealousies of Lady Lavinia and Araminta both . ’
9 Platonists and Stoics in different ways expended much effort , therefore , in accounting for the evils of experience .
10 This factor also accounts for the changes in the shares of imports taken from the Soviet Union and the developing countries in these years .
11 It accounts for the differences between ( a ) and ( c ) and between ( b ) and ( d ) of Fig. 21.18 .
12 What accounts for the differences from town to town , or the similarities between them ?
13 This accounts for the attempts of fiercely traditional societies , for instance those based upon fundamental islamic principles , to turn the clock back to the past .
14 The essence , or form , of a species accounts for the properties of that species , and a definition of it provides the means of demonstrating that the species does have those properties , and why it has them .
15 The time trend accounts for the effects of a constant natural rate of growth of output while VP allows for the possibility that the efficiency of the economy , and hence the natural level of output , is reduced by a variable inflation rate .
16 this one set of social relations , of production , accounts for the relations in other spheres of social life within each locality or region , that politics and ideology are essentially explicable in terms of economic change and restructuring .
17 Air-dispersal probably accounts for the distributions of some liverworts , though many spores are not long-lived in a desiccating atmosphere , but the presence of certain hepatics on Ascension Island , St Helena and Tristan da Cunha seems to confirm it .
18 Emphasis is placed on how successfully the approach accounts for the events of the last five years .
19 This probably accounts for the events of the closing years of the reign of Clovis 's longest surviving son , Chlothar I. After Theudebald 's death in 555 , Chlothar sent his own son Chramn to Clermont , where he terrorized the bishop , Cautinus , and removed the comes , Firminus .
20 His paradoxical logic is in many respects similar to the non-binary logical structures developed in France in the late 1960s to account for the peculiarities of literature and of narrative in particular ( see section 3.2 above ) .
21 All theoretical treatments of the quantised Hall effect proposed so far require there to be no dissipative scattering if they are to account for the values of h/Ne 2 at the plateaux .
22 It included also the description of those specialized features of morphology and physiology that distinguish species and might ( often by more or less inspired guesswork ) be said to account for the differences in their distribution .
23 The major problems included the need to account for the differences in the schools ' intakes , deciding which groups of pupils were included in the result statistics ( e.g. whether sixth form pupils taking ‘ O ’ levels were included along with 5th formers ) , and the problem , for outsiders such as Gray , of getting hold of all the relevant statistics .
24 It is therefore not surprising that many variants of the interaction between stellar winds and molecular clouds have been explored to account for the differences from one H-H object to another .
25 Those differences seem very largely to account for the variations in actual patterns of support which have occurred over time .
26 Furthermore , an analysis which attempts to account for the interrelationships between syntax , semantics and discourse involves quite a different relationship between sociolinguistic and syntactic theory than is implied by one which attempts to demonstrate that alternation takes place between semantically equivalent surface forms .
27 By hook or by crook , football is being called to account for the years of profligacy .
28 While this held true for three of the four firms , it was possible to account for the exceptions in firm C because of the business getting practices of that firm , and in particular its brokerage relationship with the land agent .
29 Quite simply , there is too little equipment installed to account for the levels of unemployment .
30 It was unable to account for the details of the orbit of the planet Mercury and was unable to account for the variable mass of fast-moving electrons in discharge tubes .
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