Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "United Kingdom labour law" ¶ 29
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

One and curious
The longest and best known of these is " El Curioso Impertinente " ( the impertinently curious man ), found in Part One, Book Four.
One of the most versatile small German military vehicles, the Kettenkrad, a curious but useful blend of tractor and motorcycle, was powered with a 1. 4 L Olympia four-cylinder engine.
One curious point, never explained, is that he seems to have had this done by some neighbor girls named Bailey, rather than by his own family.
One curious window on the practicalities of ostracism comes from the cache of 190 ostraka discovered dumped in a well next to the acropolis.
One curious effect is that, unlike ordinary particles, the speed of a tachyon increases as its energy decreases.
One of the villagers becomes curious and asks what they are doing.
One curious clause in the contract of tenancy stipulated that children born to parents living in Dagenham could not be housed on the estate themselves when the time came for them to establish their own homes.
One day Martyn happens to get hold of that address and, curious, goes there to investigate.
One of the most curious buildings recovered was in fact a Lupanare ( brothel ), which had many erotic paintings and graffiti inside.
One of the academics present at the meeting, William Channing Webb, a professor of anthropology at Princeton, states that on an 1860 expedition " high up on the West Greenland coast " he had encountered " a singular tribe or cult of degenerate Esquimaux whose religion, a curious form of devil-worship, chilled him with its deliberate bloodthirstiness and repulsiveness.
One suggested child of the Prince and his longtime paramour was James Ord ( born 1786 ), whose curious history of assisted relocations and encouragement has been chronicled ; Ord eventually moved to the United States and became a Jesuit priest ( but appears later to have married, see article on American Civil War General Edward Ord ).
Well into the very late incarnations of the Universal Century timeline, Newtypes remain as rare an occurrence as they were during the One Year War, facilitating a curious cycle of weapons development, in which highly specialized newtype-use weapons are developed, and repeatedly phased out, as fielding people capable of using such weapons in significant numbers remains consistently impossible.
" One of the most curious characteristics of that age ," observed French classical scholar Gaston Boissier, " was that the women appear as much engaged in business and as interested in speculations as the men.
One of the more notable survivals is the curious 19th century font, which is inscribed with one of the longest known palindromes, written in Greek:, which translates as " Cleanse my transgressions, not only my face ".
One of the kittens is named Milo (" Chatran " in the Japanese version ), and has a habit of being too curious and getting himself into trouble.
One of the largest obstacles scholars had to overcome during the early days of Assyriology was the decipherment of curious triangular markings on many of the artifacts and ruins found at Mesopotamian sites.
One curious feature of the Senchus is the presence of Airgíalla in the lands of the Cenél Loairn.
One curious practice observed since early in the war with humanity was that whenever Chig infantry encountered the grave of a dead human soldier, they would dig up the body and mutilate the corpse, typically by completely dismembering it.
One curious rite practiced among the ogres of one tribe is the " Six Day Night ," where ambitious tribesmen demonstrate their loyalty to Vaprak and their tribal leader by being placed in a dark cavern for six days with no food and only a small amount of water.
Jerome Clark writes that " One curious feature of the post-1887 airship waves was the failure of each to stick in historical memory.
One version of Amazo is pulled from the timestream by a curious Hourman, who wishes to meet his " ancestor ".
One curious design offshoot of the 1300 was the " Pony " jeep-like farm vehicle, later renamed " Dragoon ".
One of the most curious albums issued by the label was a sampler, There is Some Fun Going Forward.
One of the more curious aspects of Sanderstead is that it has no pub, unlike nearby Warlingham which has around six.

One and exclusion
One may notice from this that applying a fermionic creation operator twice gives zero, so it is impossible for the particles to share single-particle states, in accordance with the exclusion principle.
One common explanation for the decline was Perot's exclusion from the presidential debates, based on the preferences of the Democratic and Republican party candidates ( as described by George Farah in Open Debates ).
One infantry officer recommended it to the exclusion of all other designs, noting that " the intrenching tools of an army rarely get up to the front until the exigency for their use has passed.
One particular rule is the Pauli exclusion principle, which states that there can be only one fermion occupying each quantum state, which also applies to electrons that are not bound to a nucleus but merely confined to a fixed volume, such as in the deep interior of a star.
One Republican congressman who voted against the initial bill accused Pelosi of unethically benefiting Del Monte Foods ( headquartered in her district ) by the exclusion of the territory, where Del Monte's StarKist Tuna brand is a major employer.
One can think in terms of adding electrons one by one to a positively-charged " container ", taking the Pauli exclusion principle into account.
One is often credited to the exclusion of the other.
One of the three mutations shifts the population in favor of the higher order oligomerization state in solution as shown by both size exclusion chromatography and native gel electrophoresis.
One effect of this was the policy of Vergonha, which made non-French speakers feel ashamed of the non-French language through official exclusion, humiliation at school and rejection from the media as organized and sanctioned by French political leaders.
Both the Catholics and the Eastern Orthodox consider each of themselves solely to faithfully represent the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church to the exclusion of the other.
One well-known incident was the exclusion of future Olympic champion John B. Kelly, Sr., who had served an apprenticeship as a bricklayer, from the 1920 regatta.
The exclusion principle is most commonly applied when one poses this scenario ; One usually considers that the desire to lift one ’ s arm as a mental event, and the lifting on one's arm, a physical event.
One may note that most of the older ethical systems ( Kantian formalism, theonomic ethics, nietzscheanism, hedonism, consequentialism, and platonism, for example ) fall into axiological error by emphasizing one value-rank to the exclusion of the others.
One, by Albert Bleckmann, director of the Institute for Public Law and Political Sciences at the University of Münster, objected to the lack of voir dire, the exclusion of evidence under the motion in limine, the fact that the government did not approach LaRouche about his tax situation before indicting him for tax violations, and concerns about double jeopardy because of the nearly identical charges in the Boston and Alexandria trials.
* One member of the " Fish & Bicycle " traveling theater troupe advanced the theory the plague was a direct response to the exclusion of women from true parity in the performing arts, thereby upsetting the natural order.
One criticism of Kohlberg's theory is that it emphasizes justice to the exclusion of other values, and so may not adequately address the arguments of those who value other moral aspects of actions.
One of the most marked differences is the exclusion of the bluesy coda on " Down Payment Blues ".
He failed to qualify in Monaco, the only time Bellof failed to qualify in his short Formula One career, along with his exclusion at the 1984 Austrian Grand Prix.
One major area of contention is the frequent exclusion of the personal experience of impairment, cognitive disability, and illness, which is often left out of most discussion in these circles in the name of " focused " academic discourse.
One of the effects of the report would be the exclusion of the Welsh language from Welsh schools for several generations and a consequent fall in the number of Welsh speakers.
One basic point of these perspectives is that a libertarian or emancipatory outlook requires openness of social space, tolerance or celebration of difference, and opposition to arbitrary authority ; an absence of such an outlook contributes to social closure and exclusion, thus producing social effects similar to a fascist regime ( e. g., oppression of minorities and lack of basic liberties ).
One notable exception provided for in many nations is the exclusion of women from holding certain positions in the military, such as serving in front line combat capacities or aboard submarines.
In addition to marking their return, the three-match women's One Day International ( ODI ) series against Ireland also represented South Africa's first taste of ODI cricket, as the first women's ODI had been played in 1973, during their exclusion.
One notable exclusion is the ability to import static methods from other classes.

0.276 seconds.