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In some cases governments would have had smaller majorities or none.
They are also used for miscellaneous case government, much like prepositions in other languages.
As is often the case government power is more stupid than human society as a whole.
The ablative case is also important to case government with postpositions.
Case government may modify the meaning of the verb substantially, even to meanings that are unrelated.
In some cases government authorities have required backdoors be installed in secret.
In other cases government policies have been introduced to encourage or force the switchover process, especially with regard to terrestrial broadcasts.
Or two, securing a withdrawal route in case government forces abandon Damascus and decide to retreat to the coast.
"In fact, I am not even supposed to be talking to you," he said with a determined calm in case Government agents were watching.
The problem, Dr Sagdeev points out, is that in some cases government ministries and departments still have control.
Case government is a more important notion in languages with many case distinctions, such as Russian and Finnish.
Furthermore, the telicity contrast can act as case government, so that changing the case can change the meaning entirely.
He attended the Vieille Case Government School where his father served as the principal.
In 730 of those cases Government prosecutors argued that the defendants should be detained without bail because of the danger they posed to the community.
'It recognises, however, that if markets are to work effectively, they need information which in some cases Government is in a unique position to provide.'
Traditional case government
Case government
In those cases government was attempting to control or direct the content of the speech engaged in by the university or those affiliated with it.
In some cases, large fees are demanded and in other cases government officials are reluctant to allow samples to be exported.
The abstract syntactic relation of government in government and binding theory, a phrase structure grammar, is an extension of the traditional notion of case government.
A language is dependent marking if grammatical markers of agreement and case government between the words of phrases tend to appear more on dependents than on heads.
Nevertheless in recent years considerably more interest has been aroused and in at least some cases governments and international agencies are showing themselves willing to put real money into research.
"But of course, in some cases governments are the engine of reform and in other cases governments are attempting to hold reform back."
Most commonly, a verb or preposition is said to "govern" a specific grammatical case if its complement must take that case in a grammatically correct structure (see: case government).
It superseded the stringent privacy provisions of the cable act, for example, by specifying that in many cases government agencies can use the more relaxed traditional wiretap process to get personal information.