Countries which are poorer than Britain but with a severer climate, e.g. Eastern Europe, also have lower winter excess deaths. |
|
In their severer forms, these disorders include the bipolar disorders and major depressive disorder. |
|
The first and severer damage due to reserved expenses is the liability of the principle of efficiency of the public expenditure. |
|
Modern telephone applications in residential areas must satisfy increasingly severer requirements in terms of noise pollution. |
|
Several delegations advocated severer standards for emissions including cold-start tests, and for fuel quality. |
|
In the event of a web break, wrapups are generally avoided by the severer and diverter. |
|
Episodes of drought and heavy flooding are likely to become more frequent and severer. |
|
The two cases had prompted the formulation of legislative measures to impose severer penalties for the acts in question, which should be adopted in the near future. |
|
Whether Mr Manuel will agree is another matter. Although South Africa's economy has been taking a severer battering than expected, it may still be better placed than many others to weather the storms. |
|
Bows are awkwardly made to severer theorists: Myra Jehlen argues that Emerson's vision of man coming into his godship through the conquest of nature reads suspiciously like an apology for westward expansion. |
|
Further, no penalty shall be imposed for a criminal offence that is severer in degree or description than the maximum penalty that might have been imposed for that offence at the time when it was committed. |
|