Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | So , let's bury this 4 oz syndrome , after all , the absolutely lowest amount you can inject and say the person is actually embalmed ( after a fashion ) is 3 oz and in his book told us , ‘ greying off is due to the phenol or ethyl alcohol in the fluids ’ , so take them out and no greying off-the eternal question is answered . |
2 | Nu high art , |
3 | Nu high brow |
4 | Frederick Herzberg ( 1968 ) put forward the two-factor approach to motivation after an extensive study of job attitudes among engineers and accountants . |
5 | the two-factor interactions ( NP , NK and PK ) |
6 | In Chapter 8 — on motivation — we shall examine research on the civil service which draws heavily upon the two-factor analysis developed by Herzberg . |
7 | And as to the over-imaginative way in which papers have so often treated her , she added simply : ‘ Because I 'm only young , and have lived such a short and normal life , they run out of things to say about me . ’ |
8 | Just as you thought the coupe for the masses had receded into a misty-eyed memory of metallic-blue Ford Capris and diamond-white Opel Mantas , along comes the Calibra ; a practical yet sleek four-seater to set the high-mileage rep 's heart alike . |
9 | And Maastricht promises to make the Europe-machine turn still faster because it pre-emptively convokes the next set of constitutional talks for 1996 . |
10 | The cat began to stalk her through the blade-broad iris leaves with such solemnity that she laughed and paused even longer , to play with him , and was cheered . |
11 | According to the obstetrician , Isaac Barker Brown , female insanity went through eight stages , beginning with hysteria , and was largely due to ‘ failure of nervous power … produced by peripheral irritation arising in the branches of the pudic nerve , more particularly the incident nerve supplying the clitoris ’ . |
12 | Despite his efforts to tear into his food with Latin gusto , or the slicked-down hair above the urban American face , he simply ca n't appear to be a native of a provincial Italian town . ‘ |
13 | Warming-up figures like the infinity or horizontal figure of eight , and straight passes in trail are the introductory manoeuvres which involve least complication and yet teach the flyers the arts of timing and speed control . |
14 | A similar processing difficulty is caused by relative and comparative clauses in which the introductory word ( who , which , than , etc ) has an embedded syntactic function ; for example in ( 8 ) : " some things about her son [ which it was better that a boy of eleven should n't catch ] " . |
15 | The part of the programme which had received highest priority was the introductory course in information retrieval for the engineering undergraduates . |
16 | It has been decided that the introductory day on future courses should include a substantial session on confidentiality . |
17 | In climatology the system has been adopted as providing a suitable framework and appears as the introductory foundation for Causes of Climate ( Lockwood , 1979a ) , where it is argued that the application of systems theory and mathematics has completely changed the subject of climatology . |
18 | After some confusion over the numbering scheme , US sources say HP is preparing to debut a low-end with a box that will best the introductory price of Sun Microsystems Inc 's new Sunergy Classic by $10 . |
19 | Microsoft 's director of Windows NT and networking products Dwayne Walker indicated desktop NT could appear at $500 list and hit a street price of $300 , given reseller discounts of 40% to 50% , once the introductory price expires . |
20 | Most of the introductory texts to organisational theory will have a chapter on the classical , systems and contingency approaches to organisations . |
21 | What we said in the introductory session is a lot of this is to do with skills . |
22 | If the message contains the word ‘ Secure ’ , that means the words following make up the introductory identification of someone who will contact him and give him orders . |
23 | The exhibition is not simply a display of painted nudes ( and there are only four examples of the male nude ) ; rather , as the introductory text tells us : ‘ All were painted with the nude model directly in front of the artist ’ . |
24 | Alternatively , the speaker can use a summarising phrase , often repeating the introductory expression , not necessarily low in pitch , but also followed by a lengthy pause . |
25 | As was apparent in the introductory chapters , sign language and education have historically been kept apart by those working with deaf people . |
26 | The introductory chapters of my books contain much advice which , if heeded , would help to minimise the dangers . |
27 | To discover why , we must turn to the introductory chapters of Genesis . |
28 | Examples taken from the introductory presentation show how these rules work . |
29 | With these points in mind , turn now to the Title page and the Introductory presentation and note how these are expanded by techniques presented in the Sections of the report , leading to the Conclusions and the Recommendations . |
30 | The introductory remarks found at the beginning of a book , usually by someone who is not the author of the book . |