Then does the exercise of the power conferred by clause 8.5 necessitate such an addition or omission? |
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The original meaning of the establishment clause has been exhaustively debated by scholars and Supreme Court Justices. |
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I agree that, for example, the provisions of clause C3.1 et seq. in Schedule E are relevant. |
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Thus the negative-pledge clause may be drafted so as to extend to them expressly. |
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The four hours in excess of 38 hours per week in the clause shall be paid at double time. |
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The parliamentary draftsmen in 1996 widened the classes of people not eligible, so the clause now covers anybody who contested general elections. |
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This may be enforced by law, with a clause in the legislation to set up regulation of care providers. |
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A telic clause has an ACHIEVEMENT or ACCOMPLISHMENT verb not in the progressive, not in the simple present, and with no modal. |
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Also not considered here are the various options that exist when the embedded clause functions as the subject of the main clause. |
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Weak trading has apparently triggered a clause in the sale agreement enabling a renegotiation of the price. |
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I find in that clause alone no indication whatever that any arbitration clause in the main contract is intended to be incorporated. |
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In the actual, erroneous, sentence, the subject of the main clause, a man, is also the subject of the relative clause. |
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Every relative clause will have the distinction marked both by punctuation and also by the choice of subordinator. |
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In any case, there should be no chance of ambiguity, or any other sort of unclarity, so long as the relative clause is properly punctuated. |
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An operator within a relative clause does not like to take wider scope than operators outside the relative. |
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In the following pair, the first uses it as an interrogative content clause and the second uses it as a fused relative. |
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Well, toward the end of the third clause within this tripartite relative clause we find the following sequence of words. |
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Sentences in which the grammatical role of a noun phrase is the same in the main clause and the relative clause seem to be easier to process. |
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A group of students in an English as a second language program served as subjects for special instruction in relative clause formation. |
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In addition, accusative case on who does not typically survive when the word is shunted to the beginning of an interrogative or relative clause. |
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It was in the context of a privative clause in relation to the ability of courts to issue prerogative writs. |
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The relative clause was seen as secondary, rather than the entire point of the remark, and thus was subject to redaction. |
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He said that damages were not recoverable for breach of the minimum commitment clause. |
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To make matters worse, you will have no recourse because a compensation clause will rarely be in your contract. |
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In a Khmer text there are no spaces between words, instead spaces indicate the end of a clause or sentence. |
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There was only silence, so either he knew which clause it was, or had reasoned it out. |
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While the pivot of an intransitive clause is the core-argument of the verb, the pivot of a transitive clause is not its agent but its patient. |
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In contrast, where the affix is a prefix, the dependent clause follows the independent clause. |
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Finally, in the original table there were only three cells in the relative clause affirmative realized with default lexical tone. |
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The construction is symmetric neither with the main clause nor with the relative clause affirmatives. |
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In these cases, the complex content of the clause, either affirmative or negative, is symbolized by a single, unanalysable morpheme. |
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In addition, the ironic echo also displays a syntactic shift by changing the first clause to a negative and the second to an affirmative. |
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Its members are really whingeing and whining on a clause that gives one law for all. |
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The Court noted that the clause applied irrespective of the experience and juniority of the employee concerned. |
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A catch-all clause forbidding the award of the cup to anyone wearing a white shirt would be more sincere. |
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I notice that the clause states that artificial watercourses are not part of that particular acknowledgment. |
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The Quaker, an ardent Federalist, aided Antifederalist opposition to the Constitution by repeatedly raising objections to the slave trade clause. |
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The entire catalogue of exceptions under Article XX is qualified by an introductory clause commonly termed the chapeau. |
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She absconded with the jewellery and the question was whether the loss was covered by the insurance policy or fell within its exclusion clause. |
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If you make the ablative absolute into its own clause, then you can think about the relationship between this clause and the main sentence. |
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What we really have here is an adjectival clause qualifying potentially a noun phrase or a noun. |
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A grounded clause corresponds to the traditional category of finite clause. |
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The trick is to make the meaning slide ambiguously from clause to clause, from sentence to sentence. |
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I should have known as soon as they used a clause in a sentence it was a bad idea. |
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Two clauses were responsible, the equal protection clause and the due process clause. |
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The rent review clause predicated the existence of an open market for the property. |
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In particular, make sure it is for a fixed term and that there is a break clause to terminate it. |
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Also, I say to the Minister that it does not appear to me that there is a treaty clause in the bill. |
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Under a provision referred to as clause 24 of the contract there was a time limit. |
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One of those clauses that I am referring to in particular is clause 409, which was added to the bill. |
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Early medieval Latin also allowed for the possibility of a dependent substantive clause with finite verb and subject in the nominative case. |
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Opposition politicians say the mission violates a constitutional clause which restricts foreign combat troops on sovereign soil. |
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I do not think you can even grant an order nisi if the privative clause operates, can you? |
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After notice and a period for comments, Creative Commons has versioned the attribution clause in our licenses. |
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This material plainly has to reach the expert and the clause provides that it should do so within a specific time limit. |
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The laws also endanger women's health, and violate privacy rights and the Equal Protection clause of the constitution. |
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Clause 3 gives both Rybcomflot and Bergen the right of termination without notice in case of non-fulfilment of clause 3 obligations. |
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An attornment clause in a mortgage whereby the mortgagor attorns tenant at will to the mortgagee is not a true contract. |
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Your contract will contain a voetstoots clause absolving your seller from all liability for latent and patent defects. |
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The voetstoots clause provides that you take the property as is, with all defects as they exist. |
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A non-restrictive clause is one that does not serve to identify or define the antecedent noun. |
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They don't even want to know what the distinction between a restrictive and a non-restrictive clause might be. |
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Now the clause that really throws things into a cocked hat in this case is the one I have asterisked. |
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In that trial and others a Trial Chamber dwelt on the interpretation of this loose clause. |
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The clause is describing an important step in bringing the process of self-actualization to fruition. |
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The dependent clause following the first period appears to be a sentence fragment. |
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Khartoum has argued that the clause paves the way for the south's immediate secession. |
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He said the intent of the clause was merely to ensure that the committee would continue operating when problems arose. |
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For the past 10 years it has been an antithesis of what is visualised in the education clause of the Freedom Charter. |
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In my view, however, a claim of the former kind is plainly raised, albeit there is also a claim under the express indemnity clause. |
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One links the subject of the dependent clause with the oblique dative argument of the independent clause. |
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I could have sworn this obnoxious clause had been dropped, after widespread criticism. |
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This clause serves to emphasize the importance placed by the contracting parties on the avoidance of litigation. |
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A local occupancy clause has now been included for people who live or work in the area. |
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Phil Gallie, the voice of social conservatism, believes a hard line on the clause will deliver votes in the Ayr by-election. |
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However, he declined to explain why the legislators dropped the clause on marital rape. |
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A restrictive clause is one which limits, or restricts, the scope of the noun it is referring to. |
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My learned friend says that clause 4.1 prescribes ordinary hours for casuals. |
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The deal fell through, the club could not pay back the money, and so the club was pursued under a clause in the loan agreement. |
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Applying this test, it is clear that an arbitration clause is not directly relevant to the shipment, carriage and delivery of goods. |
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No clause in the agreement established a mechanism to anticipate or respond to market failures. |
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There is a clause in the planning law against building development on open land. |
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The voting machines and paper ballots for said election shall carry the following designation, which shall be the title and submission clause. |
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Nevertheless, it was held that this clause did not oust jurisdiction and prevent the court from reviewing the decision on procedural grounds. |
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A major obstacle to overcome was whether a statutory ouster clause could prevent the intervention of the courts. |
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The former kind of clause I shall call ceteris paribus clause, the latter one closure clause. |
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In this bill, if we excluded subclauses and of clause 4, the rest could stand alone. |
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In passing legislation in this chamber, if that legislation does not have a sunset clause we have to take that into consideration. |
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However, the question will not be put, because the proposed new clause is outside the scope of the bill. |
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That clause allows creditors the choice to elect for this legislation to apply to contracts that existed prior to this law coming into force. |
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The due process clause permits military justice but restricts its application to the armed forces or to the militia during times of war. |
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In any event certainty is best achieved by express words in the arbitration clause itself. |
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Either way, the First Amendment stands as an effective backstop to the copyright clause argument. |
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The independent clause must be connected to the dependent clause in a subordinating conjunction. |
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The contract claim turns on clause 17 which may be described as payment in accordance with ministerially determined rates. |
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The speeches of the noble Lords revealed something of an over-suspicious misunderstanding of what the effect of the clause means. |
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In subordinate dependency, the dependent clause may precede or follow the independent clause, as in the Chickasaw example. |
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The starting point for these issues is really clause 3, which seems superficially to be straightforward. |
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Be careful to note in this clause that the will supersedes all previous wills, making them null and void. |
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One clause promised to buy off Conde's German mercenaries, led by John Casimir of the Palatinate, with a payment of 500,000 ecus. |
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This clause is the constitutional foundation for the separation of church and state. |
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The end of the previous sentence itself contains an absolute clause with the participle being as its verb. |
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The other thing that they're learning about is syntax, phrase boundaries and clause boundaries. |
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The minx agrees, only to put a clause in her wedding contract that allows her to brew coffee whenever she pleases. |
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She relies on a clause in the contract which exempts her from liability for damage to any tools providing she was not negligent. |
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The first clause of a cleft sentence consists of It, a form of the verb be, and the focused item. |
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Nor do the arguably penal terms of the late delivery clause justify the penal interest clause. |
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The justice's dissent reasoned that the clause only forbade government from establishing an official church and coercing religious beliefs. |
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Where the marker is a suffix on the verb, the dependent clause precedes the independent one, as in. |
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The title of the film refers to a clause in global law forbidding incestuous sexual relations. |
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The solution was a clause forbidding the government from acting in a manner inconsistent with the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi. |
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However, clause 1 of the Bill stipulates that a bill of lading must be transferable, thus following the preamble to the 1855 Act. |
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A complex sentence consists of an independent clause and a subordinate clause. |
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Smith said many journalists could look to the clause as a defence for blagging confidential information from banks, phone firms, even the police. |
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But what we do in English is shift the subordinate clause verb into preterite inflection as if to respect the choice of tense in the main clause. |
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Therefore, a concessive clause must be part of a complex sentence with an independent clause. |
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The sharing clause in a syndicated loan agreement cannot affect this conclusion. |
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Somehow that conditional clause seemed to drop away from most of the press reports. |
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Several former Confederate states conditionally ratified the amendment, declaring that the enforcement clause was ineffectual. |
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The 1918 law, the Court held, violated the liberty of contract protected by the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. |
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French also has the option of the embedded clause appearing in the subjunctive mood. |
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Mr Jones added that a clause would be inserted in the club's rules to allow customers to put money in dancers' garters. |
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The researchers asked the tutors to mark both the beginning and the end of the clause containing errors. |
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Another top European runner always insists on an opt-out clause if the race day temperature is above 30 degrees. |
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The first, clause 7, relates to recruiting a person to be a mercenary, and I guess that is something. |
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Consecutive adverbial subordinate sentences are those that express a consequence of what the main clause says. |
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Any specific conditions you put into this clause reduce the firmness of the transaction. |
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That tells us that the construction is an interrogative complement clause in each case. |
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The only solution is that both are uses of the plain form in a subjunctive main clause construction. |
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It was a spontaneous, unrehearsed, utterance of a closed interrogative clause with a complex subject containing an auxiliary. |
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The set-off clause precludes the withdrawals of amounts standing to the customer's credit as long as this liability is contingent. |
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The second clause is simply a Simultaneity clause which happens to contain a negative element but is not contrafactive. |
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I would add that the jurisdiction clause itself is in terms which are in no way exceptional. |
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The adjudication clause permits the Adjudicator to award costs to the winning party. |
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What follows a semicolon explains, elaborates, or clarifies the clause that appears before the semicolon. |
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This one will include a banishment clause for tattling, since our last nanny came this close to selling a tell-all about life among us. |
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You have footnoted the provision in the transitional clause of the schedule which shows that the cause of action remains, is that correct? |
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The risk fee covenant clause is associated with the incentive fees on contract. |
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It specifies only elections and leaves the take part clause suggestive and unelaborated. |
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Like the other covenants in a loan agreement, breach of the negative-pledge clause will trigger the default clause. |
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Under clause 2 of the 1984 Deed the company covenanted to retain at least a part of the green land. |
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By clause 11.1, the company also covenanted to offer employment to certain employees at no less than their current salaries. |
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The huge payments are being made under a clause in the consultants' new contract that came into force this year. |
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Why, then, is it important to include this clause as part of the church's credal articulation? |
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Then there are other things, such as amending clause 92 to omit the unneeded cross reference, for example. |
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The same damnatory clause is also wedged in at the close of the first and at the beginning of the second part. |
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Covers everything from run-of-the-mill clause types to such structures as clefts, pseudo-clefts, and topicalizations. |
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It also contains a nice 18th c. dangling participle not controlled by the matrix clause subject. |
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This is due to the fact that a simple, transitive, declarative clause in Lisu does not distinguish between agent and patient structurally. |
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He will demand that governments retain the get-out clause of an appeal to the EU where new measures clash with domestic legal systems. |
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The get-out clause in these cases, often, is to suspend the jockey for careless riding and allow the result to stand. |
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The agreement provides the company with a get-out clause and allows it to renegotiate the rates annually. |
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However there may be a get-out for the clause demanding consideration of the feelings of relatives. |
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And get a kind friend to ring you after about an hour, so you've got a get-out clause if necessary. |
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He had a get-out clause in his contract allowing him to join another club which opened the door for him to join Keighley. |
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A semicolon here, a stronger verb there, and do you really need that dependent clause? |
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The privative clause boosts the validity of the decisions made by Refugee Tribunals and by decision-makers in my Department. |
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I do not think you can even grant such an order if the privative clause operates, can you? |
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He suggested that a privative clause expands the jurisdiction of a decision-maker. |
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It probably also means the compensation clause should he be tempted away is absolutely ginormous. |
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The actual wording of the clause imposes a blanket prohibition on working for another firm of financial analysts. |
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I wonder if there's another clause fining you if your train delays other people's trains. |
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Can you have a pronoun in the main clause coming earlier than an antecedent in a subordinate clause? |
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Or does the deal they have the government have some sort of funny clause in it which has led to this unintended consequence? |
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That clause provides that a car must have lamps exhibiting a white light in front and a red light in the rear. |
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This is a pretty straight-forward and self-explanatory clause, but it's important none the less. |
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Second, clause 6 of the bill allowed the gallery building to be used for purposes ancillary to the display of arts and crafts. |
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Thus, the pronouns in both conditional and relative clause donkey sentences cannot be understood as referring expressions nor as bound variables. |
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First, clause 19 which mentions acts of public enemies, pirates and assailing thieves. |
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The act also includes a clause enabling councils with a severe lack of public housing to apply for pressured area status. |
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New section 57A in clause 29 provides that the court may order that a dog be destroyed if it has rushed at persons, animals, or vehicles. |
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The idea of the clause is to check runaway courts, but, for complicated reasons, the clause has fallen into desuetude. |
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Simply put, can the commission clause in the agreement of purchase and sale amend the commission rate stipulated in the listing agreement? |
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The insurance clause in the agreement of purchase and sale between the parties states as follows. |
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This clause says the Minister can allow a department not to exercise integrity, to deviate from the standards set out. |
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A rule such as this most likely would include a grandfather clause so members wouldn't be forced to breach existing contracts. |
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A grandfather clause in that Act stated that the Act was not to affect an existing privilege as defined in the Crown Minerals Act. |
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If the rule had changed, weren't we entitled to some grandfather clause until Michael reached twelve? |
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Blair's answer should be embalmed in the Labour party constitution, perhaps as a better substitute for the old clause four. |
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First, it's wrong to take a clause out of an indirect quotation and pretend that it's direct speech. |
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New clause 4A states that the child's parents and guardians should have the primary responsibility for the child's care. |
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When a state's appropriation imparts too generous a benefit to religion alone, the establishment clause should provide a pathway to dissent. |
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So it is common ground that this clause governs the remuneration entitlements of casuals? |
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In trying to dun the states, the cigarette giants are invoking a little-noticed clause in the 1998 deal. |
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The one point imposed by the Dutch on the Thais and greatly resented was the clause introducing extraterritoriality. |
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Instead one has to go back to the language of the clause in its documentary and factual context and try to see what it means. |
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Last night, the former governor told the ABC that he was the one who insisted the clause be excised from the contract. |
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The citizenship clause declares that anyone born or naturalized in the US is a citizen of the United States and of whatever state they reside in. |
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You could try inserting a materials-price escalation clause into contracts. |
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Granted, there is an escape clause in the contract but it is limited to a specific injury and for a specific time period. |
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The contract has an escape clause that allows him the right to opt out within seven days of Sunday's final game in San Diego. |
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This law, the so-called escape clause or safeguard law, provides protection to industries injured by imports. |
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However, he said the indefinite agreement did have an escape clause in case one party wanted to pursue other avenues. |
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There also was an escape clause inserted in the treaty which allowed testing to be resumed after three months' notice. |
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Still, any unseen problems with the exterior of the home can be covered by a contingency clause at sale. |
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No such circumstances exist in this case and any evidence to be offered viva voce by witnesses in respect of the interpretation of clause N is therefore irrelevant. |
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Despite token opposition to this clause from France, Germany and Mexico, the three countries abstained in the voting, enabling the resolution to be passed. |
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The document contained a clause for massive penalties to be levied if any other investors with legitimate claims later surfaced. |
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Could a defendant sued in tort rely on an exclusion clause in the contract when sued by a person who was not a party, and therefore traditionally not bound by its terms? |
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But the clause is not intended to be used if there is no disagreement between the Master and the shipper as to the proposed description of the cargo in the bills of lading. |
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There we list the five basic clause types, and give an example of each. |
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A simple sentence consists of one main clause or principal clause. |
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The exclusion of a clause in the Democratic platform has now exploded into the biggest issue of the party's National Convention. |
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However, if the clause provides, in addition, that interest is payable immediately for the full unexpired period of the loan it is likely to constitute a penalty. |
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Police say the clause makes it difficult to deal with uninsured drivers. |
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A couple of hours later on, the prime minister came the closest he has got so far to a smack in the face when he won a division on a clause in the bill by a single vote. |
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It will remove the clause for all new policies from January. |
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Indeed, it is possible to recognize as canonical sentences those that conform in their structure to the normal clause patterns, such as subject-verb-direct object. |
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A clause in the current scheme means the spouse of a dead officer would have to give up their pension if they remarried or decided to live with someone else. |
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That the Sikh novitiates include a sizable number of Muslims is shown by inclusion in this clause of the taboos as to the sanctity of graves, shirni, etc. |
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The clause had as its primary focus legislation designed to repudiate or adjust pre-existing debtor-creditor relationships that obligors were unable to satisfy. |
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In addition, the document will include a clause stipulating procedures required for non-member countries to take part in the ASEM process, they said. |
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This project envisages the distribution of the finite that clause and non-finite CCs which can be used either as catenative complements or as non-catenative complements. |
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On the other hand, if you intend to sublicense your derivative works, consider what form of patent-retaliation clause your sublicensees can accept. |
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In this version the subject was placed after the verb either by nominating the object phrase first or by changing the sequence of main clause and subordinate clause. |
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The very Hippocratic oath contains a clause speaking out against abortion. |
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Bizarrely, David cannot say too much about it, because he is bound by a confidentiality clause which bears a passing resemblance to War And Peace. |
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The union is trying to sell its latest deal by promising that the pay entrenchment clause will be removed, clearing the way for further secondary pay increases. |
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A clause may be embedded in a phrase, and vice versa, ad infinitum. |
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I therefore intend to move a Supplementary Order Paper at the Committee of the whole House to replace that clause and to clarify the intent of the original clause. |
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By contrast, the final verb is not marked for switch-reference but is fully inflected for such categories, and this inflection is relevant to the whole clause chain. |
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A safeguard clause has been inserted in the Treaty of Accession providing the EU with draconian powers to seal-off one of these countries if a food safety problem occurs. |
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These contract notices were issued before legal guidance was available so the GLA was unable to notify its intention to insert such a clause in the final contract. |
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All that clause states is that the High Court confirms appointments. |
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However, hunting has been allowed to continue in Scotland due to a clause that allows huntsmen to use hounds to flush foxes hiding in woodlands out into the open. |
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Yet clause 206 recognises that the Government is prepared to give those coercive powers to the private sector to transport prisoners between courthouses and prisons. |
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Finally, a fee risk covenant clause is included in the contract. |
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Dangling participles occur where the first part of the sentence and the clause that follows just don't belong together, and therefore don't make sense. |
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Multi-culturalism can be used as a get-out clause by politicians who are only prepared to pay lip service to notions such as equality and diversity. |
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The former clause proscribed anyone from aiding the practice of prostitution, while the latter required the police to arrest and medically examine suspected prostitutes. |
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Alstom submits that its obligation to proceed under the provisions of clause 2 was subject to two contingent conditions precedent neither of which were satisfied. |
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Apparent examples of wh-movement are pseudoclefts in which the initial wh-phrase is a predicate and the following material is a headless relative clause in subject position. |
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That clause excludes liability for loss and nuisance caused by environmental pollution except when it arises from a sudden event which is unintentional and unforeseen. |
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Such an escape clause is dangerous, because it can be over-used. |
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The elastic clause in the Constitution allows the federal government to take action in areas not specifically delegated to it by the Constitution. |
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So the adjectival clause qualifies conduct, not anybody's state of mind. |
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A favourable ruling could find that the free exercise clause of the First Amendment trumps any state's law that discriminates against non-public schools. |
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There may even be a clause in her contract by which she has to agree to certain content restrictions. |
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But an aspect that is particularly troubling is that such a clause exists at all. |
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Although the text seems straightforward on its face, the meaning of the clause cannot be found in its words. |
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Tapsic would sign a contract with Brooklyn and had a clause where he could not be sent down to the minor leagues. |
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It is of no comfort to them whatsoever to argue for an entrenchment clause, and I am ashamed to think that a lawyer would put it up as a proposal. |
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Donald Sterling apparently sought to ensure it stayed that way by including a confidentiality clause when he settled the suit. |
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The first jurisdictional issue is, are the claims asserted in the Request For Arbitration within the scope of the arbitration clause EEMC has invoked? |
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The company could, for example, attach a consultancy clause to her severance agreement. |
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Our answer to that, your Honour, is that the reasonable justification is to be found in clause 44, not, with respect, in the law which infringes on it. |
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Thompson points out that the first clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms says that all rights can be restricted if there is a justified reason to do so. |
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Add a clause to the sales contract saying the seller agrees to hold you harmless and indemnify you against any claims that occurred before you owned the boat. |
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I will look briefly at clause 25, which deals with the wind-up of a club. |
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Meanwhile, there is not so much as a sentence, or even a clause, about the woebegone state of the episcopate, and its role in hampering the Church's mission. |
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The Empress added a special clause for land-owning farmers, who were allowed to distill up to three hundred liters. |
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The resolution also includes a clause reiterating an existing law that prevents more than four unrelated persons from living together in one house or duplex. |
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There are also a few examples that can be construed as relativization out of a supplement to the relative clause, which is a mere island violation. |
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The Act contains a controversial clause which disallows claims from workers in educational establishments who are deemed to be on customary holiday and in remunerative work. |
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To comply with their covenant at clause 2 of the Lease the family were obliged to repaper the walls in question and not simply to paint over the existing wallpaper. |
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Oklahoma is the twenty-second state to adopt the right-to-work clause. |
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The court thus sidestepped the critical issue of whether the Constitution's commerce clause gave the federal government the authority to act as national arbiters of morality. |
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In fact, the Court mentioned these cases in passing and relied on the due process clause of the fourteenth Amendment. |
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Only recently, he has been busy working on a large order for a member of the royal family, although a confidentiality clause prevents him from naming the client. |
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He could not openly defy his brother Pluto, since they were divine equals, but he magically provided Persephone with a secret escape clause to her marriage vow. |
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The clause in question is a simple modifier of the main clause. |
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However, he is fearful that the new clause may be delayed, unless the Department of Health pulls out all the stops to make sure the new legislation is written in time. |
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The flakiest clients are the most apt to bail out of a project, and so are the ones for whom we most need a written termination clause in our contracts. |
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This cannot be done by adding such a clause at the foot of the bank statement, as this document does not evidence the terms of the contract between the parties. |
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Usage mavens generally advise that such phrases ought to connect to the subject of the following clause, rather than to a noun phrase in some other position. |
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Let me add that other clause elements can conclude a sentence. |
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Viewing this sentence as consisting of a single finite clause, there are five auxiliary verbs and two main verbs present. |
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The treaty introduces an exit clause for members wanting to withdraw from the Union. |
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Relative clauses are used as a means of topicalization of a possessor of a genitive construction, as nominalization of a clause and in questions. |
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This article became known as War Guilt clause as the majority of Germans felt humiliated and resentful. |
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But town hall chiefs are to now activate an escape clause which will see up to 140 staff transferred back to the council. |
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It need imply no relationship of amplification or entailment from one clause to the next, although it can do so whenever it likes. |
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This clause, proposed by the Tory Marquess of Chandos, was adopted in the House of Commons despite opposition from the Government. |
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Athanasius insisted that Christ was God, that the homoousion clause of the Creed be understood literally. |
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The law also gives the Brazilian government the right to examine a suspect bank account, a clause that has the CNC in a dither. |
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When the situations described by main and complement clause are semantically integrated, infinitive and participial complements are used. |
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Amongst politicians in Southern Ireland, there was remarkably little attention paid to the clause during the debates on the Treaty. |
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In 1954, the Conservative scholar Saul Lieberman sought to add a new clause to the ketubot, the marriage contract. |
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Rahman was ordered to honour the clause and give Lewis a rematch in his first title defence. |
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When bank fired the loan originator, they recovered the last two years of her bonuses under the malus clause in her contract. |
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This intensified opposition, and the 1898 Vaccination Act introduced a conscience clause. |
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There will be a grandfather clause for students currently enrolled and any siblings joining ASD will be covered under this. |
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As soon as they were challenged on it they had no defence and the clause was redrafted. |
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Another red flag is a cotenancy clause that permits a drug or grocery store to close if the other one vacates the space. |
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In these varieties, the relative clause does not contain a relative pronoun. |
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An NP head may be followed by the same or different which are, in fact, the first elements of a reduced relative clause. |
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Eight of these serial constructions are repetitions of a headless relative clause whose subject is stated in the preceding verbless clause. |
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Jelinek and Demers claim that certain relative clause and other phenomena suggest that Straits Salish is a pronominal argument language. |
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Which start, like this sentence, with a relative pronoun, making the entire sentence a subordinate clause. |
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When writers nominalize, instead of using a verb in a clause to represent an action, they change the verb into a noun in a noun phrase. |
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Some states, she notes, consider a general residuary clause to constitute an exercise of that power. |
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However, in this case the residuary clause and the clause that leaves Anna Nicole's entire estate to Daniel are one in the same. |
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For example, in the sentence the dog did not find its bone, the clause find its bone is the complement of the negated verb did not. |
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Auxiliary verbs form main clauses, and the main verbs function as heads of a subordinate clause of the auxiliary verb. |
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The subordinating conjunction that shows that the clause that follows is a subordinate clause, but it is often omitted. |
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Subordinate clauses may function as arguments of the verb in the main clause. |
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In clauses with auxiliary verbs they are the finite verbs and the main verb is treated as a subordinate clause. |
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Subjective case is used when the pronoun is the subject of a finite clause, and otherwise the objective case is used. |
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Many building codes include a grandfather clause exempting older buildings until some amount of remodeling occurs. |
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Ten years ago, Frank Buono, a retired employee of the National Park Service, objected to the cross, saying it violated the establishment clause. |
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