I.nounCOLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a level/standard/degree of competence
▪ The trainees are expected to acquire a basic level of competence.
a moral standard/principle
▪ Has there been a decline in moral standards in our society?
a standard feature (=a normal or usual feature)
▪ Airbags are now a standard feature on most cars.
a standard technique
▪ A sample of blood was obtained from each patient using the standard technique.
academic standards (=levels that are considered to be acceptable)
▪ The school has high academic standards.
acceptable standard
▪ Students who achieve an acceptable standard will progress to degree studies.
compromise your standards
▪ Universities should not have to compromise their academic standards.
double standard
ethical standards
▪ The president must have the highest ethical standards.
exacting standards/demands/requirements etc
▪ He could never live up to his father’s exacting standards.
gold standard
high standard (=very good levels of work, achievement, behaviour etc)
▪ The general standard of the entries was very high.
▪ Our guests expect us to maintain high standards.
high/low standard of living
▪ a nation with a high standard of living
living standard
▪ Living standards have improved over the last century.
meet...standards
▪ beaches which meet European standards of cleanliness
normal/standard procedure
▪ It’s standard procedure to take photographs of the scene of the crime.
professional standards
▪ The Law Society’s function is to maintain the highest professional standards.
quality standards
▪ Greater investment is needed to meet the European Union’s strict quality standards.
rules/standards of conduct
▪ In war, there are established rules of conduct.
safety standards (=official rules designed to make something safe)
▪ He claims safety standards on ferries are still not high enough.
set standards/guidelines (=decide on standards, rules etc)
▪ The government has set new food quality standards for all school canteens.
set the standard (=be very good, and so show how good other people or things should be)
▪ They wanted to set the standard for software.
standard deviation
standard equipment (=the equipment that is in a car, which does not cost extra to have)
▪ Standard equipment on this model includes airbags, climate control and cruise control.
Standard Grade
standard lamp
standard of living
▪ a nation with a high standard of living
standard time
standards of behaviour
▪ declining standards of behaviour among young people
▪ It’s a parent’s job to instruct children in acceptable standards of behaviour.
standards of efficiency
▪ Their work led to higher standards of efficiency across the industry.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
academic
▪ But educators there have shown that high academic standards and the concepts under-girding school-to-work are not mutually exclusive.
▪ Under intense political pressure the strict academic standards which first prevailed were relaxed, and entry was broadened.
▪ But they illustrate the second key task facing public schools: how to increase the academic content and standards for all students.
▪ In addition, the academic standards of those receiving special education in secondary and special schools are not always impressive.
▪ All the academic standards are all locally developed.
▪ Competition for the few places available is keen and a high academic standard is required.
▪ Corporate leaders also have championed the need for higher academic standards, most recently at the National Education Summit in 1996.
acceptable
▪ This study has shown that an acceptable standard of diabetic care can be provided in normal surgery time.
▪ Students who achieve an acceptable standard may have the opportunity to progress to degree studies.
▪ Inadequate professional services are services which fall below an acceptable standard, but are short of negligent work.
▪ Sections which fall below an acceptable standard in terms of quantity, quality of content, or physical condition should receive priority.
▪ And above all pupils were the first to acknowledge the moment when they moved from acceptable to unacceptable standards.
▪ But it must be remembered that the process of evolving acceptable accounting standards has taken many years.
▪ The western section is already at an acceptable standard but the east section is in poor condition, virtually unusable when wet.
▪ They will also be expected to submit answer books that are of acceptable standard.
accounting
▪ This move has greatly strengthened the regulatory force of accounting standards.
▪ Harmonising international accounting standards is more important than one might think.
▪ In local authorities, the law plays an equally important, probably more important, part in accounting standards.
▪ Companies are required to state that their accounts are prepared in accordance with approved accounting standards.
▪ It is possible that proposals for revisions to accounting standards on these subjects will be made in the future.
▪ This is the first time that accounting standards have had even this amount of statutory backing.
▪ We will monitor the further developments and pronouncements of the several bodies presently addressing the subjects of corporate governance and accounting standards.
▪ The paper also proposed that an accounting standard restrict the uses of the share premium account.
double
▪ Stone also emphasizes the extent to which women accepted the double moral standard.
▪ That double standard was the underbelly of every easy laugh stand-up comedians got when they did hooker jokes.
▪ Industrialised countries are accused, rightly, of double standards.
▪ Patricia Schroeder of Colorado remains a cautionary symbol of the unfair double standard in the let-your-emotions-all-hang-out department.
▪ Medical men, as well as the military and defenders of the double standard, were strong proponents of the Acts.
▪ No wonder this Government is so despised - Major's double standards smack of deviousness.
▪ Translated to criminality, the double standard prescribed different attitudes toward male and female criminals.
▪ The double standard of morality relied upon this separation between the public and the private.
educational
▪ We have begun the job of raising educational standards and breaking down the barriers between the vocational and the academic routes.
▪ Clinton called for uniform educational standards without regard to income level.
▪ In the context of the debate about the curriculum, economic decline and supposedly falling educational standards were important elements.
▪ They insist that virtually all of their students reach a high educational standard.
▪ For more senior jobs individuals will have already demonstrated an appropriate level of intelligence by their educational standards and successful work experience.
▪ The rate is now 86 percent. Educational standards promise to be a flash point in the presidential campaign this year.
▪ Enhanced educational and training standards will have demand implications for services in such areas as tourism, leisure and recreation.
environmental
▪ The early stages are the most critical in achieving high environmental standards and safe operation.
▪ The volunteer has to meet all relevant environmental standards, of course.
▪ Higher environmental standards have to some extent highlighted the problem of offensive odours.
▪ In addition, environmental standards have improved - sometimes dramatically - and leisure and recreational facilities have been substantially enhanced.
▪ Countries with initially low environmental standards are not immune to pressures to raise them.
▪ Under the code, each country would be allowed to meet its own environmental standards.
▪ The garbage giants' advantage was their ability to meet new environmental standards requiring safer, costlier methods of disposal.
▪ The financial costs of incineration, even with high environmental standards, are rarely higher than the costs of recycling.
ethical
▪ There is also an emerging globalisation of ethical and judicial standards, which should render social and individual rights more secure.
▪ The ethical standards of Wall Street have to be monitored at all levels.
▪ It requires the highest ethical standards and immense skill.
▪ They appealed to the selfless moral and ethical standards we like to believe we possess.
▪ As well as the physical provisions, certain moral and ethical standards had to be met in order to gain eternity.
▪ Only 19 percent of the respondents gave lawyers high marks for maintaining honest and ethical standards.
▪ The Finance Houses Association were also anxious to ensure that collection practices conformed to the highest ethical standards.
▪ He refused to lower his ethical standards for higher ratings.
general
▪ The general standard of joiner work achieved by this company has improved considerably during the past four years.
▪ As in Galicia, the lowness of the general standards concealed a hopeless poverty.
▪ Mr Jackson said the general standards of hygiene throughout the group were excellent.
▪ Sadly, it is my experience that the general standard of golf etiquette at club level is deteriorating.
▪ The person principally concerned with the general supervision of standards is, of course, the traffic commissioner.
▪ On the other hand, the general standard of farming was high.
▪ Subsistence economies sometimes achieve a low-grade stability by the very poverty of the general standard of living.
▪ The bridle lengths must also be symmetrical, and by general standards are long.
gold
▪ He believes in the gold standard, term limits, parent-power in schools and tenant-power in public housing.
▪ Presto, the gold standard controlled prices and alleviated trade imbalances.
▪ Each needs an archetype, a gold standard, to allow their specimens to be put in the correct cabinet.
▪ In sum, a myopic gold standard could make us more vulnerable to, not safer from, market fluctuations.
▪ The scale of the shock was in any case unprecedented, and most of the world was forced off the gold standard.
▪ Their candy is the gold standard.
▪ One notable feature of the gold standard was that it allowed automatic adjustment to take place via changes in expenditure and output.
▪ In short, the gold standard obligated the central bank to exchange currency for gold at a fixed price.
high
▪ Basil did not preach on such matters; he simply set high standards for teachers to emulate.
▪ You get the picture: We need higher standards.
▪ We want to see such wastes dealt with to the highest possible standards in ways that are consistent with industrial economics.
▪ Problem is, the current system resists higher standards, whether in student performance or teacher competency.
▪ Increasingly high standards favour the larger wealthy companies that have little interest in tropical diseases.
▪ They see it in the high standards he and his people consistently achieve.
▪ The photography and commentary are of high standard.
international
▪ Such cells would be more in line with international standards, but less conducive to political mobilisation.
▪ Woodward believes the quintuplet would benefit from playing alongside and against players of National League First Division and international standard.
▪ Behind it stood the international gold standard.
▪ The opening encounter took them to the small island of St Vincent, where the pitch was some way from international standard.
▪ Such a label would assure consumers that the product was made in compliance with international labor standards.
living
▪ The mechanisation of agriculture and industry is cutting work opportunities, so in many cases living standards are declining.
▪ As a result, agricultural productivity and peasant living standards remained stagnant.
▪ Also the material benefits of Prussian citizenship had begun to show in improved living standards and educational opportunities.
▪ I think that most people are interested in the fact that living standards under this Government have risen dramatically.
▪ These data will be used to develop profiles of the living standards of similar household types at different income levels.
▪ As an infection carried on the air and in milk, diphtheria was not much affected by changes in living standards.
▪ Even though the real wages and living standards of the proletariat may rise, its members will become poorer in relation to the bourgeoisie.
▪ These figures clearly highlight the difference in world living standards.
low
▪ The general interior layout is magnificent, but later alterations have made the decoration of a lower standard.
▪ To lower admission standards would be, in effect, to devalue the currency in which their diploma had been issued.
▪ Bigger classes and lower education standards are predicted as teachers are sacked to save money.
▪ Q: Do crews of bargain airlines have lower standards?
▪ Do the pages of ticks mean that Fred is a genius or that the work was set at too low a standard?
▪ But heads and teachers complain just as much about low standards among employers.
▪ Leaving behind low living standards and poor conditions in work and study seems more like rejection than adaptation.
▪ We can not compete on the basis of low educational standards or poor working conditions.
minimum
▪ The Acts lay down a minimum standard for air quality, and impose pollution emission controls to particular polluters.
▪ The short-term goals and minimum / standards established for measures in Workplace 2000 will be treated much like control limits.
▪ Recently, the federal government set its own minimum standards for landfills.
▪ Collective bargaining is a flexible instrument and can build upon the minimum standards which the law lays down.
▪ Britain defines it in terms of competition and free trading; most of the other countries conceive of it in terms of minimum operating standards.
▪ Certain services, such as education, have minimum standards imposed by Parliament.
▪ We will require local authorities to define minimum standards of accessibility in their areas and draw up transport plans which meet them.
▪ Taken together, all these requirements constitute a set of minimum professional standards by which individual practitioners can be assessed and judged.
modern
▪ Outside school - and maritime mishaps - community life was restricted when compared to modern standards.
▪ Such systems were usually, by modern standards, inequitable, exploitive, rigid, and inefficient.
▪ Boxers fought an enormous number of contests by modern standards to satisfy a working-class public who wanted to see regular bouts.
▪ Will these peoples continue to live in poverty and disease, or will they be brought up to modern standards of living?
▪ Many early child-rearing practices were barbarous by modern standards.
▪ While slow by modern standards, it was considered fast in 1985.
▪ Although of limited accuracy by modern standards, the Scuds were reasonably successful at hitting large targets such as urban settlements.
moral
▪ Religions frequently fail to live up to their high moral standards.
▪ He feared that in the absence of moral standards, workers could be abused and exploited.
▪ The need to survive, which always dictates the moral standards of society, once more underlined the role of the women.
▪ They appealed to the selfless moral and ethical standards we like to believe we possess.
▪ The central concern for all these groups is with what they perceive to be declining moral standards.
▪ He has dumped several party members for violating his personal moral standards.
▪ By the moral standards of some of the bargainers the claims of some of the others may be immoral.
▪ With its tendency to glorify brute force it outrages moral standards and inflames the passions.
national
▪ He won the under-17 boys 1500m in 4-03.5, just outside the national standard.
▪ The group is working to establish national crime lab standards.
▪ The car park was immediately closed upon advice from Darlington council, which carried out the tests in line with national safety standards.
▪ Later we hope to be the first offshore contractor with a competent core crew accredited to national standards.
▪ These figures are typical and it is therefore evident that the service is not only meeting, but exceeding national standards.
▪ At one extreme lies the Soviet Union which has over 100 national air quality standards and few emission standards.
▪ There will, for the first time, be a national standard against which a pupil's performance may be measured.
▪ They comprise pledges on national standards and a new set of promises specifically geared to the local area.
new
▪ We are not doing that; with our new standards they represent as good a risk as any house.
▪ Then they may feel morally devalued and a new standard of behavior can take root: the good of the service.
▪ The changes which arise as a result of the new standard are described on page 39.
▪ The proposal would violate new state standards which regulate Delta pumping.
▪ On Wednesday, the new board voted 7 to 3 for the new standards.
▪ Fresh new material and standards done with a fresh touch.
▪ John Pople has set new standards for quantum mechanics, theoretical chemists, and for the general chemistry community.
▪ Those new standards, the product of years of work, will dramatically change the way students are taught in California.
poor
▪ Training in interview skills takes a preventative approach to poor standards of interviewing.
▪ Can you honestly see yourself being poor - really poor by our standards?
▪ These educational institutions suffer from very poor standards and give tacit or open support to the oligarchy.
▪ This was a difficult decision as it meant a drop in their poor standard of living.
▪ Lack of respect for the law and unemployment were blamed by 76 percent for poorer standards of youthful behaviour.
▪ The Consumers'Association blames poor hygiene standards.
professional
▪ First, maintaining professional standards has arguably never been more important.
▪ Instead of becoming a unified political force dedicated to raising professional standards, black deejays remained unorganized and unfocused.
▪ Instead they retain the status of written professional standards.
▪ This reflects the Society's function to monitor and maintain the highest professional standards.
▪ Such a practice would tend to promote suitable professional standards and reduce the chances of miscarriage of justice.
▪ Expertise was dissipated, professional standards dropped.
▪ The high professional standards present in some other occupations, such as science or medicine, are the outcome of a long process.
▪ Locally it needs to be done to as near a professional standard as possible.
rigorous
▪ Instead of an anecdotal narrative it must aspire to the rigorous standards of a science.
▪ It seems possible but highly unlikely that more rigorous standards were used for the categories that we happened not to study.
▪ Among them are: Rigorous standards in wiring and installation.
▪ I was wrong, he said, to think that the Black Studies Department had abandoned rigorous standards.
▪ They are professionals with equipment which meets rigorous safety standards.
▪ It advocated more rigorous standards for planning future projects.
▪ A combination of higher taxation and more rigorous academic standards led to a dearth of first-class amateurs.
technical
▪ They expect other nations to set technical standards and to innovate new markets.
▪ Determine offences and decide on compliance with technical standards.
▪ This provides the Institute with a unique influence in the maintenance of technical standards.
▪ In yet another report, Lord Hunt of Tamworth ignored the vital issue of technical standards for a future cabling system.
▪ Now there is an open technical standard.
▪ Subject to this constraint and the firm's other technical standards we must always act in the best interests of our client.
tough
▪ However modern incinerators give off less dioxins thanks to tougher design standards.
▪ And, sure, he spent Wednesday in Chicago pumping wind into his rhetorical drive for tougher education standards.
▪ Each sets out tough new standards and gives new information and rights to the public.
▪ Besides tougher legal standards, there are several procedural reasons to go slow under the new law, legal experts say.
▪ Fewer than 30 of Britain's 450 designated bathing beaches passed the tougher standard last summer.
▪ Apply slightly tougher standards for employers who hire temporary foreign workers for specialty jobs in the high-tech industry and elsewhere.
▪ Dolphin admits that its going to be tough marketing two standards to the same set of people.
trading
▪ Voice over Trading standards say legal action could follow if the company wasn't bonded, to safeguard customers.
▪ David Roberts, chief trading standards officer of Shropshire County Council, is another contender.
▪ This may seem like a large haul, but trading standards officers insist it's just the tip of the iceberg.
▪ Cleveland trading standards officers were flooded with complaints about the double glazing firm in February.
▪ The man, from Leiston, Suffolk, complained to trading standards officers.
▪ Police and the trading standards were led to the house by a suspicious neighbour.
▪ Displaying the wrong price is a criminal offence and you can report the shop to your local trading standards office.
■ NOUN
industry
▪ Unsurprisingly, it found Unix superior in networking, multi-user support, support for industry standards and cost competitiveness.
▪ The year-to-year trend for the firm must be examined, and comparisons must be made with industry standards.
▪ Workstation based publishing systems like Interleaf are an industry standard but offer very little more than the Macintosh in terms of actual capabilities.
▪ C., is considering industry standards.
▪ We continually look for ways to break brewing barriers and set new industry standards.
▪ Sorry, no industry standards in the human memory field yet.
▪ The spread of the Apple Macintosh within publishing to the point where it has become an industry standard.
▪ The industry standard for shipping produce is a chilly 41 degrees Fahrenheit, he said.
officer
▪ Trading standards officer say the recent growth in car boot sales has provided a perfect outlet for the computer pirates.
▪ Trading standards officers say there are no regulations requiring the product to be banned.
▪ Trading standards officers investigated the couple after complaints from a computer engineer who bought their products at a sale in Lyneham.
▪ David Roberts, chief trading standards officer of Shropshire County Council, is another contender.
▪ This may seem like a large haul, but trading standards officers insist it's just the tip of the iceberg.
▪ Trading standards officers monitor the movement of animals in and out of the country.
quality
▪ His responsibility is to ensure that a particular package has achieved the quality standards set by the project which is using it.
▪ Q Quality standards and hints on carpet care are given.
▪ Firstly, ambient air quality standards or goals need to be specified.
▪ Not all aspects of the quality standards belong in this chapter.
▪ Additionally, a uniform quality standard in safety training will be created throughout the Group.
▪ One major criticism of the air quality management strategy relates to its use of air quality standards.
▪ File management Introduction All quality standards place heavy emphasis on file management.
▪ Crown and Key establishments are being assessed by our inspectors for their quality standards right now.
safety
▪ Stricter regulation of health and safety standards is called for.
▪ The usual choice is a helmet that meets the safety standards for bicycles.
▪ The film was financed by off-shore oil company money and there were no health and safety standards.
▪ Tests found uranium levels as high as nine times above the safety standard.
▪ The manual points out that mains can kill and I reckon that it doesn't meet any of the safety standards.
▪ The findings could lead to improved seismic safety standards at nuclear plants.
▪ The tightening up of safety standards at nuclear power plants inevitably followed the reactor accidents.
▪ Border Patrol officials say the vests meet safety standards.
■ VERB
achieve
▪ His responsibility is to ensure that a particular package has achieved the quality standards set by the project which is using it.
▪ Place more stress on ensuring that students achieve high academic standards.
▪ If you normally insist upon and achieve high personal standards of performance the idea of not obtaining this can be almost unbearable.
▪ Providing a sense of accomplishment and recognition to those achieving standards of performance 5.
▪ Students who achieve an acceptable standard may have the opportunity to progress to degree studies.
▪ He had achieved, by the standards of Wall Street, technical mastery of his subject.
▪ It might be considered an expensive reward for achieving a high standard and a costly method of public relations.
▪ Candidates who achieve the required standard in coursework and written examinations proceed to the submission for the MMus.
apply
▪ However, it no more obliges me to apply without question your standards to you than mine to myself.
▪ The students argued that the school discriminated against them by applying more lenient standards to minority applicants.
▪ That he went grossly wrong in applying the standard does not mean that the standard as such was inapplicable.
▪ Professionals have to be wary of applying their own standards.
▪ Gradually, I was made to feel unpopular and I applied these new standards to him.
attain
▪ June, too, had wanted to be noticed for herself and not just for fading to attain impossibly high standards.
▪ It articulates the Group's commitment to attaining the highest practical standards of health, safety and environmental protection in the workplace.
develop
▪ This is a developing service which should also develop software standards in the future.
▪ A commission was created to develop statewide standards for schools by next year.
▪ A majority of developing countries feared such standards would be used to block their exports and weaken economic growth.
▪ It also will help the industry develop standards for the modems.
▪ B Develop national standards for cardiovascular care.
▪ But Democrats say the speedup would undermine the work of a commission that is developing standards for a new statewide test.
▪ The Council is united in its resolve to maintain and develop standards of professional management and competence.
▪ But a slim majority think the commission should act first to prevent testing companies from developing the standards.
ensure
▪ Labour's independent Food Standards Agency will ensure high food quality standards.
▪ The Act requires childcare facilities to be registered to ensure that standards are maintained throughout the country.
▪ We will back the work of the Broadcasting Standards Council and remain vigilant about ensuring high standards in satellite broadcasts from abroad.
▪ Proper training of food handlers has a vital role in improving their morale and motivation and ensuring that standards are met.
▪ The clinical teacher also has a responsibility to ensure that a high standard of nursing care is given to the patient.
▪ These require employers to assess users' workstations to ensure they meet certain standards.
▪ The Inspection department's role is to ensure that quality standards are properly maintained, without incurring disproportionate costs.
▪ And it has created a new job, that of quality assurance manager, to ensure that standards are maintained.
establish
▪ Congress ought to establish minimum standards for licensing of handgun owners and registration of handguns.
▪ These standards have been adopted by many states, counties, and cities; others have established their own standards.
▪ Values: these define what is seen as success by the organisation and establish standards of achievement within the organisation.
▪ The group is working to establish national crime lab standards.
▪ Within these objectives the association is empowered: To establish and maintain appropriate standards of competence for managers in the industry.
▪ The law calls for the government to establish programming standards unless the industry devises its own after one year.
▪ Control means to establish standards of performance, measure performance against those standards, and take corrective action where required.
▪ Products graded in accordance with established standards bear the appropriate grade marks.
fall
▪ In the context of the debate about the curriculum, economic decline and supposedly falling educational standards were important elements.
▪ Taking Corrective Action Corrective action should be taken if performance falls short of standards and the analysis indicates that action is required.
▪ The performance of most cities falls substantially below this standard.
▪ The district tests the water and adds chloramine if levels fall below standards.
▪ If they fell below his standard he was disappointed, but not censorious.
▪ Anything less than this is a measure of the extent to which the research falls short of scientific standards.
▪ In the background are grumbles over falling standards, inadequate facilities and bureaucratic overload.
▪ Such legislation would outlaw any models which fell below a certain standard.
improve
▪ The point of our educational reforms is to improve standards.
▪ Many tribes have used revenues to improve living standards and supplement government-funded programs in social services, healthcare and education.
▪ Collaboration between the royal society and family health services authorities would be a sensible way forward in improving dispensing standards.
▪ The findings could lead to improved seismic safety standards at nuclear plants.
▪ This strategy is explicitly intended to improve living standards sufficiently to divert popular protest.
▪ Efforts were made to curb unlicensed medical practice and to improve the standards of that profession.
▪ More established resorts improve a lot on these standards, but perhaps offer less local colour and charm.
▪ Think of the future-education, improved standards of living for the people.
live
▪ I still don't live up to my standards.
▪ The expectation that government action, through the welfare state, could remove inequality and uniformly improve living standards was openly challenged.
▪ This strategy is explicitly intended to improve living standards sufficiently to divert popular protest.
▪ What evidence is there that you are not living up to the appropriate standards?
▪ Successive generations will probably have living standards lower than those enjoyed by their parents.
▪ Global demand is projected to double over the next 30 years as population increases and living standards improve.
▪ Elsewhere in the world, the fee will be adjusted for living standards.
lower
▪ Developing countries are attracting investment not by lowering their standards, but because they are making the best of their comparative advantage.
▪ Suddenly interested in the achievement of poor black schoolchildren, pundits, federal officials and policy-makers unanimously condemn Ebonics for lowering standards.
▪ Lavish praise given for undemanding and second rate efforts lowers standards rather then enhances them.
▪ He refused to lower his ethical standards for higher ratings.
▪ With increasing, incompetent social engineering in schools and other public institutions? Lower standards of public health, education and policing?
▪ It may become dull and mechanized, lowering its performance standards and expectations in the inter-est of predictable functionality.
▪ Food safety guarantees can lock food processors and distributors into purchasing home-produced food and not imports produced to lower standards.
▪ Another response has been to dig deeper than usual into waiting lists or to lower admissions standards.
maintain
▪ But there are now several recognised cooking methods that not only maintain the standards of traditional cooking, but improve on them.
▪ First, maintaining professional standards has arguably never been more important.
▪ Being capable of risking showing one's own personal vulnerability while still maintaining professional standards.
▪ They were to be prepared for their maternal duties and given material assistance to maintain a higher standard of motherhood.
▪ Tact, vigilance and persistence in maintaining high standards are necessary.
▪ Hickson take pride in their ability to solve technical problems quickly while maintaining the highest safety standards.
▪ The results also point up the problem of maintaining the standards reached in the new services.
▪ The result will be a more coherent and comprehensive system by which to maintain standards in our awards.
meet
▪ In return for meeting these standards the exchange has insulation from liability for negligence to specific persons.
▪ To prepare for a lifetime of learning, all students need to meet higher standards and master a solid academic core.
▪ Issues hence no longer meet the high standards of credit quality required by the eurobond market.
▪ Young people who meet the standards earn nationally recognized credentials that employers value.
▪ All three flavourings have been produced to ensure they meet the standards for which Schwartz is famous.
▪ Specifically, ValuJet did not initially meet Defense Department standards for maintenance, training and internal auditing, he said.
▪ I understand that the existing safety surface meets the relevant standard so no further safety surfacing should be required.
▪ Border Patrol officials say the vests meet safety standards.
provide
▪ She thinks many agencies are providing good standards of care.
▪ They provided an objective standard by which we could judge ourselves.
▪ Complaints procedure: Norwich Union's aim is at all times to provide a first class standard of service.
▪ The scientific method has provided standards for research.
▪ It has been proved that Lothian has low bureaucratic costs and provides an above average standard of services at low cost.
▪ These cakes provided a standard by which to judge the substitutions.
▪ We will continue to be innovative and will provide value and high standards of service and safety for all investors and borrowers.
raise
▪ What can I do to raise standards generally in schools?
▪ Most important, Loftus launched a campaign to raise academic standards and expectations.
▪ We have begun the job of raising educational standards and breaking down the barriers between the vocational and the academic routes.
▪ Serigraph also has worked to raise standards at the high school to reflect its needs.
▪ The presence of at least some specialist assistance has been shown to be essential for raising the standards of the whole team.
▪ States could raise academic standards for some students and consign others to a new and marginally improved version of job training.
▪ Officials are drafting the strategy, which aims to raise teaching standards through training and staff support.
▪ On education, Labor is pledged to raising standards while cutting class sizes for 5, 6 and 7 year olds.
reach
▪ Cherwell Scientific Publishing Limited was founded in 1990 to distribute and publish carefully selected software which reaches this standard.
▪ They insist that virtually all of their students reach a high educational standard.
▪ Both bodies regularly inspect the homes and have powers to make sure that care and other conditions reach specified standards.
▪ Why work more industriously to reach the new standard?
▪ The young concert pianist had spent fewer hours reaching concert standard than he had spent achieving a mediocre amateur level.
▪ They never reached the standard of work evidenced by the Parthenon or the Erechtheion.
▪ Diplomas are awarded to candidates who reach a satisfactory standard in written examinations following nine months of coursework.
▪ Studies that reach a high standard can be submitted for publication.
set
▪ Creative, determined to set the highest standards.
▪ It sets zoning standards for previously unregulated swingers clubs and semi-nude modeling businesses.
▪ Never before has there been such open abuse of power by those who are supposed to set standards for the people.
▪ You can only set standards and then see if those standards are met.
▪ But since the majority sets the standards, the differences of the majority are considered normal, those of the minority odd.
▪ If state laws establish certain certification requirements for teachers, the collective bargaining contract can not set up conflicting standards.
▪ Basil did not preach on such matters; he simply set high standards for teachers to emulate.
▪ Instead, regents of individual institutions and systems were given the power to set standards, the reports said.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be common/standard/normal practice
▪ It is normal practice for the definitive sale and purchase agreement to be drafted by the acquirer's solicitors.
▪ It is normal practice for the heads to specify that each party will be responsible for the costs of its own advisers.
▪ It is normal practice for the purchaser to order a survey for two reasons.
▪ It is normal practice for the vendor to disclose various documents to the purchaser as part of the disclosure exercise.
▪ Motorcycles would be kept out by barriers at each end - this is normal practice for cycle/pedestrian paths.
▪ The first is the wide variation in specification and finish that are standard practice in the motor industry.
▪ This is standard practice, but such an event is unlikely.
▪ Whatever the circumstances, it is standard practice in embryo transfer to introduce several embryos at a time.
style-setter/trend-setter/standard-setter etc
the gold standard
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Air quality standards vary from state to state.
▪ All his work is of a very high standard.
▪ I'm afraid you haven't quite reached the standard required for the job.
▪ I'm afraid your driving isn't yet up to standard.
▪ If the pilot has not been trained to normal airline standards, he will not be employed by us.
▪ In reading tests, 15% of school students were found to be below the standard for their age.
▪ Judges remarked on the high standard of this year's entries.
▪ Many Europeans who consider themselves to be poor are rich by the standards of some Third World countries.
▪ Safety standards are simply not being maintained.
▪ Shakespeare is the standard against which all playwrights must be measured.
▪ The standard of workmanship on this table is extraordinarily high.
▪ The industry standard of temperature for shipping produce is 41 degrees Fahrenheit.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Many of them are of a Victorian standard and need considerable investment.
▪ Ministers have shifted their focus from primary standards to the lack of pupil progress at key stage 3.
▪ Months of wrangling over new production standards for the vaccine and new inspection procedures followed.
▪ Similarly, your internal editor insists that you create documents based on equally arbitrary and unattainable standards.
▪ The organisation published a draft standard on computer graphics at the end of March.
▪ They need a person who sets standards of competence and integrity to be aimed at.
II.adjectiveCOLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
as
▪ A motorised telescopic steering column is fitted as standard, as is an electrically adjustable seat with a memory function.
▪ What finally evolves as standard jargon may be entirely different than anything suggested so far.
▪ A plastic dust extraction adaptor is included as standard.
▪ Already the story was being repeated as standard history.
▪ All 605s are fitted with a three-way catalytic converter, anti-lock braking system and an ultrasonic alarm as standard.
▪ Now they're arguably the easiest of all classics to look after, and come brimming with character as standard.
▪ On the other hand it does not provide remedies for production problems which can be applied as standard recipes or procedures.
▪ With anti-lock as standard, they respond smoothly and effectively to instruction and show no signs of fade during repeated hard stopping.
■ NOUN
bearer
▪ All regiments may include a standard bearer and/or musician, and these cost double the points value of an ordinary trooper.
▪ Their presidential standard bearer was criticizing the woman they love to hate.
▪ Obviously, the regiment must include a standard bearer before it can be given a magic standard.
▪ Mr. Hill was an important standard bearer.
▪ Ronald Reagan was not without handicaps and dissatisfaction with both of the party's standard bearers in this election was unusually widespread.
▪ Niblit replaces the normal battle standard bearer option in the army list.
▪ The army general and standard bearer are very important to the Empire army.
deviation
▪ Five replicates were performed per drug dilution and the standard deviation of the mean is shown.
▪ In either case the system is out-of-control, although all values lie within the 2 standard deviation range. 62.
▪ The distribution remains normal but the standard deviation decreases as the square root of n, the sample size.
▪ Mean and standard deviation figures therefore include these two patients.
▪ Means and standard deviations of the variables used in the subsequent analyses are presented in Table 1.
▪ The variation in salinity at a depth of 1,600m has been less than standard deviations from the 1975-78 mean.
▪ Eighty-two percent of the papers are published within one standard deviation on either side of the mean.
▪ The standard deviation can usefully be visualized as the distance from the mean to the point of inflection of the bell-shaped curve.
equipment
▪ This limit does not apply to standard equipment that is fitted by the manufacturer.
▪ They provide information for the receptionist when dealing with enquiries for the guests as to what standard equipment is in the room.
▪ Apple computers have long been standard equipment in the graphics and photographic industry.
▪ The ventilator, improved and updated, is now standard equipment in most operating theatres around the world.
▪ Be advised, however, that with its high level of standard equipment, the Mountaineer is not cheap.
▪ Government engineers bought sub-standard equipment, inflated the price, and pocketed the difference.
▪ For the same price - around nine grand - standard equipment is better, including remote-control central locking and a sunroof.
error
▪ There are also facilities to display the data's standard errors and select polynomial and rational functions.
▪ Thaler and Rosen reported several estimates with confidence limits around each, based on their standard errors.
▪ The reason for their very big standard errors become clearer from the specification of the leisure effects.
▪ Data are expressed as mean percentage of T cells binding from three replicate wells; lines represent standard errors.
▪ The bar lines denote standard errors.
▪ This gives a total of 16 out of 36 which could be solved using standard error correction algorithms.
▪ Additionally, the standard errors of the estimated coefficients are larger in Models 2 and 3 than in Model 1.
▪ Three pieces of daub were dated and provided an average age and standard error of 830 plus/minus 40 years.
fee
▪ Fees Search work will be charged for on a standard fee basis.
▪ It has sought to identify what criteria must be met before any standard fees system could be workable.
▪ Of immediate concern to the profession was the Lord Chancellor's introduction of standard fees for magistrates' court work.
▪ The first of these, standard fees in the magistrates' courts, is to be introduced in January 1993.
▪ A standard fee was then imposed.
form
▪ This contract, which is reproduced here, is a typical example of a standard form contract found in the haulage industry.
▪ Furthermore the finding itself - that women in each class use more standard forms than men - is not without problems.
▪ However, with standard form contracts directed at consumers, the legislature has interfered because of the imbalance in bargaining power.
▪ The standard form 1980 provides a procedure where the client puts forward three specialists whom he would be happy to see used.
▪ Again standard forms can be used and copies should be sent to all interested parties.
▪ This is best obtained by asking interviewees to complete standard forms or to take tests before or between interviews.
▪ It is usually written on a standard form, but not necessarily.
gauge
▪ The YC5 or YC6 fits both the fine and standard gauge machines.
▪ At least when you're knitting on the bigger gauges you have fewer rows to knit than on a fine or standard gauge.
▪ Finally, one exciting development is the electronic intarsia carriage for use with the standard gauge electronic machine.
▪ The line was seven miles long, single track, and of standard gauge.
▪ All these accessories fit all Silver standard gauge punchcard machines.
▪ Remove the stitches from the standard gauge machine with the garter bar and replace them on the chunky machine.
▪ Apart from these, the other accessories available for the standard gauge models are not available for the fine and chunky gauges.
issue
▪ A free link to the Maker is supplied as standard issue to every Earthling, fully installed by him from the womb.
▪ They fitted pretty well, but were standard issue.
▪ Police said he was shot by a standard issue SA80 rifle, one of the Army's deadliest weapons.
method
▪ All gliders and light aircraft have to recover satisfactorily with the standard method.
▪ And the standard method of teaching was sheer translation.
▪ Aggregation results in mixed or compound Poisson distributions which can not be fitted by standard methods.
▪ The washing of the northern blots was carried out according to standard methods.
▪ Bound antibodies were detected with an alkaline phosphatase conjugate by standard methods.
▪ Writing of names A standard method of writing names should be adopted.
▪ If you are using packaged binaries, you should install as per the standard method for your distribution.
▪ Myc point mutants were generated by site-directed mutagenesis using standard methods.
model
▪ The concept of an advantageous mutation spurring evolution is the standard model with which evolutionists still work.
▪ On the standard model, water passes via a duct under and thence through the media.
▪ In the third stage, production consists mainly of standard models and there is a reluctance to undertake specials.
▪ Then we tried to get a pair of shoes, also a standard model.
▪ The assumptions about classical conditioning that are implied by this notion must be rather different from those embodied in the standard model.
practice
▪ The first is the wide variation in specification and finish that are standard practice in the motor industry.
▪ Win had also used a false name through the years, standard practice for officers engaged in covert work.
▪ This was, in fact, standard practice and Barratt was fully aware of it.
▪ But fee waiving is standard practice among money funds.
▪ This was formerly standard practice but had lapsed in recent years.
▪ This, I learned, was standard practice when a customer was about to be sacrificed for the greater good of Salomon.
▪ This is standard practice, but such an event is unlikely.
▪ Philip Redfern suggested it should become standard practice for statisticians to put their professional advice on the record.
procedure
▪ Again this is a standard procedure throughout Grimes.
▪ All teams were responsible for developing their own approach to self-management; there were no standard procedures.
▪ No two old people will react the same way, so no standard procedure can be recommended.
▪ No one asked me about follow up phone calls made to me by their offices, standard procedures for campaigns.
▪ From 1754 onwards marriages were entered on printed forms, otherwise no standard procedure was laid down until 1813.
▪ This is a standard procedure whenever there is a dispute over the availability of a privilege.
▪ For all his standard procedures, I don't think he is actually imitating anybody.
▪ Kinase labelling, hybridisation, and washing of the blots was performed at 42°C according to standard procedures.
rate
▪ Turns on to headings will be made at the standard rate, but using the stop-watch, not magnetic compass.
▪ The standard rate for a federal student loan that does not require a co-signer is now 8. 25 percent.
▪ His ambition was to reduce the standard rate of tax to 25p in the pound by the next election.
▪ Discounts typically run 10 percent to 60 percent off standard rates.
▪ Thus after year six, your monthly payments are higher than the standard rate demands.
▪ When charges are made, standard rates apply for the services provided to our personal customers.
▪ The standard rate is 17.9 per cent.
▪ The last Labour Government put up the standard rate to 35p.
set
▪ Each machine comes with a standard set of at least 35 different type-faces.
▪ The companies said they will share technology and develop a standard set of communication protocols.
▪ Proof correction marks a standard set of signs and symbols used in copy preparation and to indicate corrections on proofs.
▪ But they were built to a safety standard set 30 years ago.
▪ Less than half the wines listed were selected for awards making the standard set one of the highest in the world.
▪ This approaches the standard set by the patient's charter.
▪ The standard set of Spectrum keys have been added to in an intelligent way too.
▪ There is a standard set of terms for the conduct of an arbitration.
size
▪ They must conform to the pattern and standard size laid down by the Post Office.
▪ Why did he not decide to reduce the three para battalions to the new standard size?
▪ How many standard sizes do Beaver offer and why is this important?
▪ All the pallets were of a standard size which Bob guessed to be about four feet square, about sixty-four cubic feet.
▪ The 20-strong team cuts the material into standard sizes and Robert liaises with sales offices on orders and delivery dates.
▪ They come in a fairly wide range of standard sizes.
work
▪ This remained a standard work well into the next century.
▪ She published extensively on the technology of New World pottery, and wrote a standard work, Ceramics for the Archaeologist.
▪ By far the most exciting is Molecular Biology of the Cell, which will surely become the standard work for cell biology.
▪ For the expert the book will certainly become a standard work of reference.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ standard size paper
▪ A work week of forty hours is standard in the U.S.
▪ All hand-baggage was X-rayed - this is now standard practice at most airports.
▪ Drug tests are a standard procedure following train accidents.
▪ Prices start at $15,489 for the standard model.
▪ Students are encouraged to learn standard English because this is what they will need to know in the business world.
▪ Supermarkets typically have six standard food departments.
▪ We make shoes in all standard sizes.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ In telephone and face-to-face selling standard sales pitches are used, regardless of the specific needs of the customer.
▪ Letters can be compiled from standard paragraphs stored in the memory.
▪ Most industrial/commercial concerns will have such standard costs calculated for their ranges of products.
▪ You must know the rules and be familiar with standard market terminology.