I.verbCOLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a bold statement/assertion/claim
▪ In a surprisingly bold statement, the couple said they had no intention of marrying.
a compensation claim
▪ He was seeking legal advice on a compensation claim.
a liability claim (=a claim that someone is legally responsible)
▪ A liability claim was made by a consumer injured by the product.
a pay claimBritish English (= official request for more pay)
▪ The miners voted for strike action in support of their pay claim.
an insurance claim
▪ She filed an insurance claim for the missing jewellery.
claim a reward
▪ He contacted the police, hoping to claim the reward money offered by the bank.
claim compensation (=ask for it because you have a right to it)
▪ You can claim compensation for unfair dismissal from your job.
claim custodyformal (= say that you want to have it)
▪ Henry has claimed custody of his son.
claim expenses (=officially ask your employer to pay you back money that you have spent while doing your job)
▪ If you have to stay overnight, you will be able to claim any expenses back.
claim responsibility (for sth) (=say that you are responsible for something bad)
▪ No group has yet claimed responsibility for the bombings.
claim sth on your insurance (=get an insurance company to pay for something)
▪ He claimed the money back on his travel insurance.
claim the life of sb (=kill someone – used of a thing)
▪ The disease claimed the lives of up to a quarter of the population.
claimed descent
▪ The emperor claimed descent from David.
claiming dole
▪ The number claiming dole went up by 3,500.
deny a claim
▪ Claims that money had been wasted were denied by the chairman of the committee.
dismiss a claim
▪ An industrial tribunal dismissed his claim of unfair discrimination.
fraudulent...claim
▪ a fraudulent insurance claim
pressing...claim
▪ I was pressing my claim for custody of the child.
process an application/claim/transaction etc
▪ All university applications are processed through this system.
refute a hypothesis/a claim/an idea etc
▪ an attempt to refute Darwin’s theories
sb’s/sth’s claim to fame (=reason for being famous)
▪ One of his main claims to fame is having invented the electric light bulb.
small claims court
submit an application/claim/proposal etc
▪ All applications must be submitted by Monday.
substantiate...claims
▪ Katzen offered little evidence to substantiate his claims.
unfounded rumours/claims/allegations etc
▪ Unfounded rumours began circulating that Ian and Susan were having an affair.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
benefit
▪ If they are very ill they can claim other benefits, such as attendance allowance.
▪ As officially married couples, gay men and lesbians will be able to claim pension benefits if a partner dies.
▪ That is of course a child for the purpose of claiming a benefit.
▪ If you are claiming supplementary benefit, you automatically qualify.
▪ Anyone having to pay the full personal Community Charge can claim community charge benefit.
▪ Conservatives seek to obstruct people who wish to claim backdated benefits.
▪ They would be able to claim benefit in their own right and for their husbands as their dependants.
company
▪ The company claims the test is 97 per cent effective.
▪ The company claims that it will be the first program to integrate E-Mail, scheduling and calendar functions into one package.
▪ Then he fought with the title company claiming irregularities in his deed and those of his neighbors.
▪ Both companies claimed that sales had not been as high as they'd hoped.
▪ The company claims that these protocols can be loaded and accessed simultaneously without interrupting the LANtastic network connection.
▪ Some 60 companies there claim competence and expertise in the technology, each trying to identify its own market niche.
▪ The company had claimed that Mrs Ashgrove was replaced because of serious errors in her work.
credit
▪ We could not claim all the credit for this as our administration was coming to grips with the situation ashore.
▪ Predictably, the arch-conservative reformers claimed great moral credit for such legislation.
▪ But, fearing that others would claim the credit for the discovery, they went into print.
▪ Any minute now President Clinton will try to claim credit.
▪ Though often misused, it can result in benefits to some sections of the community for which the cadres claim credit.
▪ In addition, she allegedly claimed an earned income credit of $ 323 on the basis of his fictional dependent.
▪ There have even been proposals to clear natural forests and replace them with dense plantations of fast-growing trees to claim extra credits.
▪ Steve Merrill, claim credit for it.
government
▪ The Government regularly claim that they want value for money.
▪ On June 8, however, the government claimed to have regained control of the airport complex.
▪ Successes of the government would always be claimed by all its members, but failures would be left to the Prime Minister.
▪ It is they who have appointed a new caretaker president and a Government which they claim are interim measures.
▪ He arrived at his supreme court office despite government claims that he had already been replaced by a Mugabe supporter.
▪ For a Government that claims to have offered choice for the last 13 years, their stance on this issue is odd.
group
▪ No group claimed responsibility for the explosions.
▪ An avowed contrarian, Carr, like Groucho Marx, seems to be suspicious of any group that would claim him.
▪ Several groups claim to exert their influence, but insist that it is no more than that.
▪ A Kashmiri separatist group claimed responsibility for the blast.
▪ The hostile bid has infuriated board members of the Dowty group, who claim that their company is being underpriced.
▪ Sightings of space aliens persist, with several organized groups claiming to have seen them, or even to have been abducted.
▪ No warnings were received, and no groups have claimed responsibility.
▪ Authorities said no group has claimed responsibility.
life
▪ Smoking claims thousands of lives every year and treatment for the effects of the habit costs the taxpayer millions of pounds annually.
▪ Cancer claimed the lives of her parents and hit 14 of 17 people in her immediate family.
▪ Its independence campaign has claimed nearly 800 lives since 1968.
▪ In 1949, a quake centered near Olympia claimed eight lives.
▪ Already the inferno has claimed two lives and gutted several homes.
▪ One of those bombings claimed the life of Sacramento timber executive Gilbert Murray.
▪ The combined force of the UVF/UFF has claimed six lives in Belfast compared to 11 last year.
▪ Jack and Rita began to search for a business of their own that could help them claim a life of their own.
report
▪ Some of the more sensational reports claimed that Misrati had used his attractive young daughter to gain access to information.
▪ But in a second report he claimed to have spied Cibola, though from a distance, of course.
▪ His resignation comes after a report claimed it was cumbersome and spent too much on administration.
▪ Another report claims Stevens broke his hand trying to hit him back.
▪ The report claimed that the railways would then make a small profit.
▪ Critics of the group's report will claim the differences between landowners and conservationists were irreconcilable from the start.
▪ Unofficial reports claimed that up to eight people were killed.
support
▪ Retirement benefits are not enough to live on, so nearly 2 million pensioners have to claim income support.
▪ Hamas claims the support of about 15 percent of the population.
▪ The organisation claims the support of prominent industrialists and of former members of the security forces.
▪ He is fighting for a second term and claims the support of other key nations in defiance of the Clinton administration.
▪ This will mean that a person working 16 hours a week or more will not be able to claim income support.
▪ The mugged man even had to ask them to call the police, claimed the Victim Support group.
▪ If the man does not leap in, the Adlerian can again claim support for his theory.
▪ If Mr Ali makes it here, his family could claim support worth £1,300 a month.
victory
▪ The women are claiming a victory.
▪ And the Lakers, 4-1 since he joined them, have claimed victories in 11 of 13 to reach 28-19 overall.
▪ This one ended with both sides claiming victory.
▪ Where it had claimed a victory, the same crew of specialists dissected the results and fed them into the machinery.
▪ Singh claimed victory over Harrington at the third extra.
▪ Hamas leaders had said in recent interviews that they would claim victory if turnout was lower than 50 percent.
▪ It may yet be that he still claims victory.
▪ Not second, where he could claim a victory in the cockeyed estimations of winners and losers in presidential primary politics.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
no-claims bonus
▪ Shouldn't we, therefore, be entitled to a no-claims bonus?
prior claim
▪ Ace had a prior claim on the Doctor's affections.
▪ Bondholders, on the other hand, have a prior claim on the firm.
▪ You have a prior claim on him.
take/claim/seize the moral high ground
▪ Some corporations have seized the moral high ground.
▪ Television is therefore seen to be taking the moral high ground, the side of the punter against the forces of evil.
wage claim
▪ In the summer of 1953 the union carried out strikes and go-slows in support of a wage claim, but were locked out.
▪ Many, therefore, blamed Callaghan for the explosion in union wage claims that followed in the early seventies.
▪ Meanwhile, trade unions became more active in their wage claims, and a vicious price-wage-price spiral developed.
▪ Mr Scargill urged the miners to prepare for battle: they must stand firm over their wage claim.
▪ The union will engage in negotiations with the employers in an attempt to persuade them that the wage claim is justified.
▪ There was also concern that a renewed upturn in inflation could inflame wage claims in the forthcoming pay round.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Because the accident had not been her fault, Barbara was able to claim damages.
▪ Congress intends to make welfare harder to claim.
▪ Doctors claim to have discovered a cure for the disease.
▪ Kashmir is claimed by both India and Pakistan.
▪ Lost items can be claimed between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.
▪ Martin claimed that he was with friends at the time of his wife's murder.
▪ No one has yet claimed responsibility for planting the bomb.
▪ She claimed she was fired from her job for being pregnant.
▪ She claims to be a descendent of Charles Dickens.
▪ The 12-year-old civil war had claimed 1.5 million lives.
▪ The two companies are claiming $500 million each in damages from the government.
▪ Thousands of people who should get welfare payments never even bother to claim them.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At Tiverton in 1809 they had claimed they had received the same rate for 300 years!
▪ Euro Disney claims that one of its tour operators has sold 70 percent of its first three months of Euro Disney allocations.
▪ He claimed he was inside for not paying his poll tax.
▪ He carried a heavy lad one day, claiming to be weighted by the problems of the world.
▪ Not even the most unreconstructed Keynesian would ever claim that the General Theory was an easy read.
▪ She claimed to be doing it only for Jeeta, but there was real, wilful contrariness in it, I suspected.
▪ The prosecution had claimed that the furniture factory boss resolved to kill his second wife Helen when she walked out on him.
▪ Yardley was proud that he was one of the few bowlers who could claim to have dismissed Bradman three times in Tests.
II.nounCOLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
extravagant
▪ To these ends, the most extravagant claims were made.
▪ The extravagant claims made were more significant for what they anticipated than for what could then be accomplished.
▪ The Secretary of State made more extravagant claims for the Bill than its content would justify.
▪ Naturally there is a lot of grandstanding and extravagant claims.
▪ But all these rather extravagant claims have had to be made via the old-fashioned printed page.
▪ Postwar politics made extravagant claims for its own power, and unsurprisingly failed to deliver.
false
▪ Many asked for more clearly presented and detailed information with less false claims.
▪ This was long before Eastern Airlines fired him for moral turpitude and for making false claims about a medical background.
▪ He had also threatened to make false claims of homosexual advances.
▪ Insurance companies started hiring him to find stolen goods and investigate false claims.
▪ Why does not the Prime Minister address those issues of life and death instead of parading false claims about his Government?
▪ Editors also object to overblown or false claims.
▪ Clients often make false claims of cold-calling; sometimes so they might avoid paying for the shares they bought.
small
▪ This is described as the de minimis and serves as confirmation that the vendor will not be troubled by small claims.
▪ Few lawsuits concerning teachers, however, will qualify for small claims court.
▪ The County Court is particularly useful in that it operates a small claims procedure.
▪ The best you could expect under your statutory rights would be a small compensation claim.
▪ It was certainly used as an argument in support of the establishment of special courts with simplified procedure to deal with small claims.
▪ And they took their case to the small claims court.
▪ As a last resort they can take late-payers to the small claims court.
▪ The Civil Justice Review recommended that the small claims limit be increased to £1,000.
■ NOUN
bonus
▪ With two exceptions all have obtained no claim bonus rebates.
▪ A much smaller increase in premium where you loose your no claims bonus following an accident than with most other insurers.
▪ If this is the only payment we make, it will not affect your no claim bonus or protected no claim bonus.
▪ Although you can protect your 60% no claim bonus your premium may increase if you make claims or you receive motoring convictions.
compensation
▪ But a judge dismissed her compensation claim.
▪ I can't file a worker's compensation claim for him as he doesn't have landed-immigrant status yet.
▪ After retiring from the Chiefs in 1995, he filed a workers' compensation claim for injuries dating back to 1979.
▪ The best you could expect under your statutory rights would be a small compensation claim.
▪ Dear Help Wanted: I may be receiving a lump sum of money to settle a workers' compensation claim.
▪ Voice over Ray's now waiting for the outcome of his compensation claim.
▪ Absenteeism and workers' compensation claims have fallen sharply.
form
▪ Although social workers may supply patients with a claim form for state benefits, they rarely assist or follow through the claims.
▪ In fact, some people would not sign the claim form, which contained a general release of Harvester.
▪ Otherwise you should contact your local council and ask for a claim form for community charge benefit.
▪ Claims should be made by completing the claim form at the back of leaflet NI205.
▪ An application for the allowance should be made on the mortgage allowance claim form.
▪ During the winter months, look out for announcements on Cold Weather Payments and a claim form in your local paper.
insurance
▪ They recommended a glazier, a brush and an insurance claim.
▪ It also frees the company from any substantial future insurance claims.
▪ Guppy and Marsh, having lodged their bogus insurance claim, flew back to New York on Concorde.
▪ Managers of unclaimed property often have experience in insurance claims analysis and records management.
▪ Measures being taken include increasing the amount a property owner must pay towards an insurance claim.
▪ The package will cover areas not covered by insurance claims and will be directed mainly at the fish farming industry.
▪ Unemployment insurance claims have been rising rapidly.
■ VERB
back
▪ And there are 150 members of the Royal Commonwealth Pool's own judo club to back up that claim.
▪ No evidence was offered to back up the claim.
▪ And, even relations such as these may not be enough to back up counterfactual claims like the one Poulantzas offers.
▪ Any prophet could say that, but the Mormons had guns to back their claims on the Promised Land.
▪ None of these writers produced research evidence to back up their claims, basing them exclusively on clinical practice and theoretical projections.
▪ But Weisberg said there was insufficient evidence to back that claim in the Menendez case.
▪ It will be hard for him to back up those claims now that they have been contemptuously dismissed by Dintilhac.
▪ All that is material to this case is what substantial evidence Frank has to back up his claim about Militant infiltration.
based
▪ Gundovald's bid for the throne was based on his claim to Merovingian blood.
bring
▪ Either Alice or Bert could bring such a claim if they suffered damage.
▪ They are also denied the statutory right to bring their dependants or claim supplementary benefits.
deny
▪ Le Carre repeatedly denied the claim.
▪ Gerald Kingsland, now in New Zealand, denies the claims.
▪ The couple - a man and a woman - deny the claim.
▪ In this way beliefs and values are denied their claim to be real knowledge.
▪ Those who persevere are nearly always told that the teacher has denied their claims.
▪ He denies the claim from opponents that foxhunting is a barbaric sport.
▪ The Navy has denied his claims.
dismiss
▪ But a judge dismissed her compensation claim.
▪ She said it would be premature to dismiss the racketeering claim or rule out damages.
▪ But it could also be used to dismiss the claims, even of empiricists, that they knew how nature works.
▪ He dismissed as unreasonable her claim that she should have enough to buy her own farm.
▪ We can not dismiss claims about, say, alternative medicine or acupuncture a priori.
▪ Is that a reason to dismiss them or their claims?
▪ At first instance the trial judge dismissed the claim.
▪ Nolan J. dismissed the claim but the Court of Appeal, by a majority, reversed his decision.
dispute
▪ Lothian and Borders Police admitted liability but disputed her claim for £75,000 damages.
▪ But department administrators dispute those claims, saying the system is on its way to becoming the finest in the nation.
▪ To dispute the priority claims of others.
▪ Vaca disputes that claim but acknowledges that despondency over years of abuse had affected his ministry.
▪ Architects and surveyors will have to be called to give evidence in support of, or to dispute, such claims.
▪ The California Department of Insurance has 372 disputed claims on its books.
▪ He disputed the claim that the funding in any way promoted Inkatha.
▪ The husband disputes the claim, on the ground that there was no consideration for his promise.
file
▪ No fee is payable on filing a claim.
▪ Before her death in June 1985, Gentile filed a claim against the town alleging the ticketing was harassment.
▪ Critics say professional athletes have been abusing the generous California system by filing claims from out of state.
▪ The tenant filed a claim against the landlord to recover his losses.
▪ In 1990, 17 employees filed claims with the watchdog agency.
▪ There is no comparable question for the death of Nicole Simpson because the Brown family chose not to file a wrongful-death claim.
lay
▪ Fairfax tells me that he is a suitor, eager to lay claim to a girl who is now only eleven.
▪ These difficulties are due to the conflicts that arise between both institutions that lay claim to democratic legitimacy.
▪ With his victory in Florida officially certified, Bush announced new moves to lay claim to the White House.
▪ This was the Viking, and he had laid claim to all that was truly his.
▪ Yet who else can lay claim to winning four gold medals at four successive Olympic Games?
▪ Only the very reckless or very good at fighting would lay a claim to be Top Cat himself.
make
▪ We can not pay if farmers do not make the claims.
▪ J &038; J never said it had made illegal marketing claims.
▪ I could make large mystical claims for democracy.
▪ It would be absurd to make high claims for the international morality of the later seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
▪ How are individuals to know which ones are legitimate and which ones are shams making fake claims?
▪ When women do try to make such claims, this sets up predictable antagonisms between brothers and sisters.
▪ The football team is making a claim on her.
press
▪ Contact your tax office and press your claim.
▪ It has no pressing economic claim on my conscience.
▪ New bodies emerged to represent and press the claims of the more assertive national minorities.
▪ With Jamie Pollock suspended for one match, Proctor could press his claims for a recall to the squad.
▪ Almost certainly some suitors must have continued to press their claims through courtiers and household servants.
pursue
▪ The Court of Appeal concluded that he ordinarily worked outside Great Britain and was therefore unable to pursue an unfair dismissal claim.
▪ These include pursuing a claim for policy excess, car hire charges and loss of the use of one's vehicle.
▪ Where that does not resolve any difficulty, the client may pursue his claims with the Solicitors' Complaints Bureau.
▪ Overall, it may be difficult to discover whether there is enough evidence to pursue a claim.
▪ We will pursue a claim against those responsible for your accident.
▪ It seems we may be able to pursue a negligence claim in respect of the fire.
▪ However, it also has its own panel to whom it recommends people wishing to pursue a medical negligence claim.
reject
▪ Lord Cullen rejected the Timex claim, however.
▪ The Court only examined and rejected a claim based on religious beliefs of immunity from an unquestioned general rule.
▪ Once again, in their view, the world would have rejected their country's claim to international respect.
▪ The rejected claims could be resubmitted for further review by the carrier.
▪ FitzGerald flatly rejects this claim, but on this point her argument strikes me as thin.
▪ Gandhi rejects outright claims made concerning the superior or inferior status of religions.
▪ The Appeal Court also rejected the prosecution's claim that the mutineers had tried to mount a coupd'etat.
▪ But equally it rejects the Soviet claim that the revolutionaries were spokesmen for the masses.
settle
▪ In 1998 the federal government settled 220 claims involving priests and nuns who had been convicted of criminal abuse.
▪ It had set aside $ 24 million to settle claims by former managers that it had failed to pay required overtime.
▪ If the courts were to try to settle each claim on a case-by-case basis, it could take for ever.
▪ He approached the conference sponsors with a proposition: He would settle his claim without a suit for twenty-six thousand dollars.
▪ In all, London Underground has settled 60 out of 80 claims arising out of the disaster, to the tune of £2m.
▪ But they face the sale of most of the rest of their property in order to settle creditors' claims.
▪ Strenuous efforts were made last weekend to settle the outstanding claim of the town of Seveso itself.
stake
▪ Oxford blew their chance to stake a claim in the promotion race.
▪ In the last six months, two fledgling dirt-shirt companies have staked claims to this earthy enterprise.
▪ Those undertaking the drainage were quick to stake their claim to the best bits of land.
▪ Honor had been satisfied; each group had staked its claim to its own territory.
▪ Shastri died in 1966, and Indira Gandhi staked her claim.
▪ Other fish may have already staked their claim to other hiding places in your aquarium.
▪ It is another chance for Beagrie to stake a claim in his helter - skelter Goodison career.
▪ And Dad and Mum staked the claim so they have Galactic rights.
substantiate
▪ To substantiate claims of priority, etc. 8.
▪ He asked Wong to require the organization to substantiate its claim.
▪ Thus, a certain historical myopia is required to substantiate territorial claims.
▪ But these are no greater than are required to substantiate a claim to professional status.
▪ Though the standard of evidence we demand to substantiate extraordinary claims is high, it is not impossibly high.
▪ Three main reasons can be put forward to substantiate this claim.
▪ Regarding recruitment of staff, there is little factual evidence available to substantiate the claim either way.
▪ Bell, however, offers no direct evidence to substantiate the claim that there has been a shift in demand to services.
support
▪ But we must not support the innateness claim with the wrong arguments.
▪ This will help you support your claims, create continuity within the document, and use interesting language and ideas.
▪ It was supported in this claim by the Trustee of Lord Northampton's Settlement, who is co-defendant.
▪ A letter from Fremont to Senator Benton supports this claim.
▪ Or are public subsidies being given to support unspecified claims about cultural maintenance, diversity, and development?
▪ There is no evidence to support this claim.
▪ Some patterns in the survey evidence seem to support this claim.
▪ Cameron did not satisfy the state law requirements to support a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
bring charges/a lawsuit/a court case/a prosecution/a claim (against sb)
lay claim to (doing) sth
▪ Dole himself did not expect to lay claim to the title of presumptive nominee until after the March 26 primary in California.
▪ I'd guess it also can lay claim to the oldest leader of a still-functioning organisation today.
▪ Initially these had been one hundred and seventy-five men and twenty-five horses laying claim to an empire of fourteen million.
▪ They seem to lay claim to being purely of the mind's eye, a manifestation of pure objectivity.
▪ This latter idea could lay claim to a basis in ideas of collegiality - but only of a limited nature.
▪ With his victory in Florida officially certified, Bush announced new moves to lay claim to the White House.
no-claims bonus
▪ Shouldn't we, therefore, be entitled to a no-claims bonus?
prior claim
▪ Ace had a prior claim on the Doctor's affections.
▪ Bondholders, on the other hand, have a prior claim on the firm.
▪ You have a prior claim on him.
stake (out) a claim
▪ Both countries have staked a claim to the islands.
▪ Griffey has already staked a claim to this year's Most Valuable Player award.
▪ He may have staked a claim for a regular place, particularly if Steven Gerrard is not fit.
▪ In the last six months, two fledgling dirt-shirt companies have staked claims to this earthy enterprise.
▪ It is another chance for Beagrie to stake a claim in his helter - skelter Goodison career.
▪ It was in her desperate kisses, the way she clutched at him, her hands roving possessively, staking out claims.
▪ Others will have already staked a claim with tripods and telescopes.
▪ Oxford blew their chance to stake a claim in the promotion race.
▪ We staked claim to the two-man tents set on a steep slope in the rain forest.
▪ Weedy horrors Weeds are opportunists, quick to stake a claim for any vacant patch of ground they find.
take/claim/seize the moral high ground
▪ Some corporations have seized the moral high ground.
▪ Television is therefore seen to be taking the moral high ground, the side of the punter against the forces of evil.
wage claim
▪ In the summer of 1953 the union carried out strikes and go-slows in support of a wage claim, but were locked out.
▪ Many, therefore, blamed Callaghan for the explosion in union wage claims that followed in the early seventies.
▪ Meanwhile, trade unions became more active in their wage claims, and a vicious price-wage-price spiral developed.
▪ Mr Scargill urged the miners to prepare for battle: they must stand firm over their wage claim.
▪ The union will engage in negotiations with the employers in an attempt to persuade them that the wage claim is justified.
▪ There was also concern that a renewed upturn in inflation could inflame wage claims in the forthcoming pay round.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ After the fire we made a claim to our insurance company.
▪ Don't believe all of the health claims that are printed on food labels.
▪ His claim to the house was finally recognized by the court.
▪ No one can dispute the Mohawks' claim to this land.
▪ The local people's claims for compensation from the chemical factory have so far been ignored.
▪ They've paid out $30,000 in worker's compensation claims.
▪ They have a mining claim on the Salmon River.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Ask for this claim to be investigated, and find out whether anyone has been found responsible and brought to justice.
▪ Have your policy or claim number ready as a reference.
▪ Maisha and Tiger meet us outside baggage claim, and Maisha is looking terrific as usual.
▪ One of his more excessive claims was that the abrupt ending of a relationship could be more damaging than bereavement.
▪ The friar suddenly realised that Cranston's claim that Allingham was murdered was really a piece of pure guesswork on his part.
▪ There is no proof of these claims.
▪ There were no tourism survey results available to support claims that very late hours were needed, he added.
▪ These claims are now examined by considering the position of each sector in turn.