Example sentences of "referred [prep] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Using clients referred from across the city , they were assigned to either ICT or GCT and followed up at one , two , three , and six months .
2 In such cases , Hansard has frequently been referred to with a view to ascertaining whether a statutory power has been improperly exercised for an alien purpose or in a wholly unreasonable manner .
3 All such topics can be referred to with the help of suitable denoting phrases and used as grammatical subjects in subject/ predicate propositions .
4 The CA 1985 should be referred to for the detail .
5 Where a matter or action is pending in the court the district judge may order that a party may inspect and make a copy of any document referred to on the Land Register ( s 112(3) of the Land Registration Act ( as amended ) and r 8 of the Land Registration ( Open Register ) Rules 1990 ( SI No 13625 of 1990 ) ) .
6 The handouts referred to on the agenda are based on information discussed in chapters 4 , 5 , and 6 of this book .
7 A list of insolvency practitioners ( ie solicitors with special expertise in the field of insolvency and approved as such ) may be referred to at the Law Society 's Hall , 113 Chancery Lane , London WC2A 1PL ( Tel : 01–242 1222 ) .
8 In the article referred to at the outset , Susan Sontag remarks that camp ‘ is a solvent of morality .
9 In those circumstances , it was hardly surprising that the judge found the two appellants in contempt and made the order referred to at the outset of this judgment .
10 Lear was also subject at the hands of his employer to even more glaring misacknowledgements : in what could generously be described as an insensitive oversight , four of the plates in Birds , are referred to at the bottom of the page as being ‘ drawn from Nature and on Stone by J & E Gould ’ , while the style of the bird and the signature on the drawing itself are patently Lear 's .
11 Those referred to at the beginning of this chapter , the dieters who think they ca n't shed weight on 1,000 calories a day , almost invariably belong to the can't-get-away-with-anything group and are not following the essential rules of calorie counting sufficiently strictly .
12 The " ideal " referred to at the beginning of this chapter is of marriage in which fidelity between partners is maintained from beginning to end .
13 Provided that the sale of debt is in excess of what the government intends to spend , a process referred to at the moment as ‘ overfunding ’ , then a shortage of liquidity has been created .
14 Yet most would want to agree that such belief ought not to be contradictory in any way ( while bearing in mind the distinction between paradox and contradiction referred to at the end of Chapter 6 ) .
15 Looking back at these different sets of theories ( outlined in sections 5.3.2 , 5.3.3 and 5.3.4 ) , consider how each of them might explain the restructuring of local government ( discussed in Chapter 4 and referred to at the start of section 5.3 ) which took place in the 1980s ?
16 the descriptive matter printed below an illustration , mostly referred to as a caption .
17 This device is also often referred to as a VDU ( Visual Display Unit ) ( see Figure 1.3 ) .
18 The device we call a page printer , by the way , is more usually referred to as a laser printer , much more exciting .
19 A triplet of bases signifying an amino acid is referred to as a CODON , e.g. GCU is the codon for Alanine .
20 Throughout this report the three attainment bands are referred to as a bottom ( B ) , middle ( M ) and top(T) .
21 The display ground is referred to as a lek , which , depending on the species , may be located in the centre of a large open meadow or deep in a tropical rain forest .
22 This is referred to as a Genlock card , a term arising from television broadcasting jargon meaning ‘ generator lock ’ .
23 The signal is plotted as the temperature of the sample is increased , up to 500°C typically , and the output is referred to as a glow curve ( fig. 7.10 ) .
24 Moyer 's Buttress is no exception and is probably the finest climb on the crag , tackling a feature which in days of yore would no doubt have been referred to as a bastion .
25 The pragmatism of political urgency must be allowed to sully the purity of intellectual thought ; what is needed , at least in the short term , is what Gayatri Spivak has referred to as a kind of ‘ strategic essentialism ’ .
26 Since COSE does n't want to be referred to as a consortium , group , organisation or initiative , maybe we should start calling it ‘ La Cozy Nostra . ’
27 Henceforth , the embryo is referred to as a fetus .
28 The most favoured option is to pick a well-known name and either anthologise him or produce what is now grandly referred to as a biodrama .
29 He was about to explain , how a whoremaster in Glasgow slang , was referred to as a stickman , when Winnie said , ‘ I think I understand . ’
30 The top personnel in these enterprises have been referred to as a state bourgeoisie. we can , therefore , identify three fractions : domestic capitalists ; managers of multinationals and top administrators of public enterprises .
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