Example sentences of "implications for [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 This has , of course , important implications for the appropriate sizes for nature reserves .
2 Will the Minister ensure that before the review is completed we shall be able to have adequate information so that we can determine the implications for the various areas and for particular bases which are under threat ?
3 During its final meetings in 1978 , the Further Education Sub-Committee of ACSTT considered the implications for the major centres of further education teacher training of the DES decision to phase out the Certificate of Education as a qualification for teaching in schools .
4 However , their potential implications for the major conurbations merits their inclusion here .
5 Nevertheless , the breaches of these rules may have implications for the financial statements or other aspects of the auditor 's regular reporting responsibilities , and therefore some enquiry in these areas is needed as part of the audit .
6 How extensive such activity was on the eve of any military operations remains uncertain , while its implications for the early stages of urban growth at Kenchester must await further research .
7 What would be the implications for the other republics of Yugoslavia , or what used to be Yugoslavia ?
8 Their work raises questions with far reaching implications for the educational orthodoxies of both multiculturalism and antiracism .
9 He announced an initiative on the question of secession by a republic from the Soviet Union , which appeared to have potentially far-reaching implications for the separatist aspirations of Lithuania and other republics .
10 Whichever side has the story right , the CBoT is , for now , excluded from one of the most important co-operative developments afoot , one with long-term implications for the American markets ' competitiveness against newer , faster-growing derivatives markets in Europe .
11 Such an identification has important implications for the morticed stones and the timber portico already mentioned , suggesting that the central area preserved some level of architectural pretension ; this can only mean that early excavations failed to locate the contemporary timber buildings continuing Kenchester 's urban tradition into the fifth century .
12 It was also obvious that there was no common set of criteria of needs ( ie in terms of access times , location , form , archiving etc ) that applied to all groups , a conclusion that had serious implications for the proposed systems .
13 The use of an IHC may have important implications for the distributable reserves of the purchasing group .
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