Example sentences of "[vb pp] in section " in BNC.

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1 The photos — predominantly portraits — are unfortunately grouped in sections rather than printed alongside the text ( except , strangely , in the insignia section ) , but Mr Williamson is as punctilious as ever in pointing out interesting features of uniform detail .
2 The situation is summarized in section 2.5 .
3 To enable an explicit comparison of the different conceptions of economic change held by the three theories , the substance of each is summarized in section 3.6 .
4 Table 5.5 presents these coefficients , estimated using ordinary least squares , for exactly equivalent models to those reported in section 5.6 .
5 Consequently , much of the information reported in Section 2 simply tells us the hours timetabled for courses concerned with language teaching .
6 The survey results tabulated in section 9 of Appendix 1 suggest that even the minority who do try and balance the figures in this way ( that is , the one in five who are at least theoretical ‘ rational choosers ’ ) may sometimes be swayed by an entirely random factor — the order in which they become aware of the various different sets of cost figures .
7 Therefore trees , crops , lamp-posts , traffic signs , walls etc. will generally be included in section 170 .
8 ‘ These words are not included in section 1(1) of the Theft Act , but the appellant contended that the subsection should be construed as if they were , as if they appeared after the words ‘ appropriates . ’
9 A discussion on the special nature of the whisky industry is included in Section 6 of this report .
10 A timetable for an orderly sale with a longer period for developing relationships with purchasers than may be necessary in a rushed sale is included in Section 1102.5 .
11 The procedures for an auction process are set out in a transmittal included in section 1102.12 .
12 The text of such approach letters are included in Section 1106.2 and 1106.3 .
13 The statutory framework of the National Curriculum is contained in sections 1 to 25 of the 1988 Act .
14 The distinction contained in Sections 12 and 13 between debtor-creditor and debtor-creditor-supplier agreements is the one which causes most problems .
15 Subject to his prima facie entitlement to bail , and to the safeguards contained in sections 38 and 46 of the Act of 1984 , he is liable to be detained until trial .
16 They are contained in sections 8 and 19 of the Coroners Act 1988 .
17 By Schedule 1 , paragraph 1(c) of the Act , the provisions contained in sections 2 to 4 do not extend to any contract : so far as it relates to the creation or transfer of any right or interest in any patent , trade mark , copyright , … or other intellectual property .
18 Like the LEA , the committee must seek to grant parental preference , but subject to the exceptions contained in section 6 in so far as these have not been dis-applied by the 1988 Act ( see below ) .
19 For the many professional librarians who were employed by the banning authorities and who disagreed with the ban , the direction contained in Section 2f was virtually impossible to follow .
20 Detailed instructions for the use of the IPF Problem Control Facility are not included in this section but notes on this facility are contained in Section 6 .
21 The statutory provisions imposing the duty to give effect to parental preference are contained in section 6 of the Education Act 1980 , as amended by section 30 of the Education Reform Act 1988 .
22 Although section 76 of the Education Act 1944 imposed on the local education authority and the Secretary of State ( not the governors ) the duty to have regard to ‘ the general principle that … pupils are to be educated in accordance with the wishes of their parents , ’ the first positive duty to give effect to such wishes was contained in section 6 of the Act of 1980 .
23 In that context I have had to look at the definition of a specific issue order which is contained in section 8(1) of the Act and I know , from talking to those who have been concerned with this Act and are familiar with it , that they have no doubt at all as to what that definition means .
24 The provisions which replace those contained in section 10(3) of the Act of 1957 are to be found in section 193 of and Schedule 10 to the Housing Act 1985 .
25 By a notice of appeal dated 23 April 1992 the Treasury Solicitor appealed on the grounds that ( 1 ) on a true construction of the Evidence ( Proceedings in Other Jurisdictions ) Act 1975 the court was precluded from making the order for examination ; ( 2 ) the deputy judge had erred in law in making the order and in holding that ( i ) it was possible to interpret section 9(4) of the Act so as not to preclude the order sought , ( ii ) the exclusion contained in section 9(4) was restricted to cases where the actual capacity in which the witness was called on to give evidence was a Crown capacity and that the fact that the evidence sought was acquired in the course of the witness 's employment as a servant of the Crown was not of itself sufficient to bring the case within the exclusion , ( iii ) the fact that the witness was now retired from his position was relevant to the question whether the exclusion in section 9(4) applied , ( iv ) if some other interpretation were possible , it would be unacceptable to approach section 9(4) as requiring the court to refuse to make the order that a witness who was competent and compellable within the United Kingdom should give evidence for foreign proceedings , ( v ) there was nothing in the material sought to be given in evidence which it could have been the policy or intention of the Act to have prevented being explored ; ( 3 ) the deputy judge had erred in law in approaching the question of capacity by concentrating on the position of the witness at the time that the evidence was to be given as opposed to the position of the witness at the time that he acquired the information which was the subject matter of the evidence and the nature content and source of such evidence ; ( 4 ) the judge had wrongly ignored the fact that the Crown as a party to the Hague Convention was in a position to give effect to it and to provide evidence to foreign courts in accordance with it without recourse to the court ; and ( 5 ) the judge had wrongly approached section 9(4) on the footing that it most likely addressed prejudice to the sovereignty of the state .
26 The construction of section 82(1) that I have suggested seems to me to mesh with and to explain the scheme of indemnity contained in section 83 .
27 This is contained in section 1 , which provides that the Bank of England shall have the powers conferred on it by the Act , and also ‘ the duty generally to supervise the institutions authorised by it in the exercise of those powers . ’
28 Article 21 , together with article 22 on related actions , is contained in section 8 of Title II of the Convention ; that section is intended , in the interests of the proper administration of justice within the Community , to prevent parallel proceedings before the courts of different contracting states and to avoid conflicts between decisions which might result therefrom .
29 A reservation to this effect is contained in section 2(2) of the Act of 1990 , which provides that , inter alia , paragraph 10(1) ( e ) of the Rome Convention shall not have the force of law in the United Kingdom .
30 The critical provisions with which we are concerned are section 7(3) and ( 4 ) and section 8(2) which reproduce provisions previously contained in section 8(3) , ( 4 ) and ( 6 ) respectively of the Act of 1972 as substituted by the Act of 1981 .
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