Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 Most of the current partnerships in further and higher education ( FHE ) are of this nature , even if the inter-relationships of the parties are complicated , even complex , because the employer contribution usually relates to the financial state of the firm and this may change abruptly .
2 Borowski 's magnificent collection of ancient seals , figurines , ivories , mosaics and sarcophagi , spanning six millenia , is laid out chronologically , in one continuous trek specifically arranged by American designer Clifford LaFontaine to emphasise the inter-relationships of cultures and ideas .
3 The inter-relationships of serum IGF-I , IGFBP-1 , and insulin in children with active Crohn 's disease .
4 Tenderly responsive to the self-deceptions of others , he was unfortunately too well able to understand his own .
5 Aunt Bridget entertained most of the womenfolk of the village to another sit-down feast , and Polruan challenged Polperro to a hurling match " to the country " , the result of which was a draw .
6 The majority of potentially battle-winning systems are pursued at or beyond the frontiers of existing technology where the risks of failure are high ; where cost estimates are notoriously uncertain ; and hence where the judgments of the soundest and most experienced men can turn out to be fallacious .
7 The principles of credit rating are immutable , they insist ; their credit opinions are never swayed by the judgments of others .
8 The judgments of God fall upon his enemies .
9 It is not necessary here to weigh the relative merits of successive waves of public sentiment , and it is too early to guess the judgments of history , but differences between American and British obscenity law can be assessed on their technical merits , and the consequences are significant .
10 The Charters agreed by the Allied Powers which set up the International Military Tribunals at Nuremberg and Tokyo and the judgments of those Tribunals made it clear that everyone , from the lowest private soldier to the highest general and statesman is required to comply with the humanitarian spirit and the generally accepted principles of the laws of war .
11 The difficulty encountered by the expertise theory in trying to demonstrate the legitimacy of corporate managerial power by showing that there are restraints on the discretion of the managers stems from its attempt to combine a deference to the judgments of business managers with an insistence that corporate managers are subject to fiduciary duties that prevent them from exercising their power for their own purposes or for other non-corporate ends .
12 Oliver LJ 's dissent seems more in tune with the decision of the European Court in Factortame II than are the judgments of the majority in Bourgoin .
13 It is not surprising to find , underlying the judgments of all the experienced Queen 's Bench judges who have grappled with this problem , a feeling of acute concern about the situation thus revealed .
14 Very properly there was extensive discussion in the judgments of Barnett J. and the Court of Appeal of the English decisions on this recently-developed aspect of criminal procedure .
15 L. 41 ) , provided the main inspiration for the argument of Woolwich , and the judgments of the majority of the Court of Appeal , in the present case .
16 It is impossible for me , for reasons of space , to do more than summarise the most relevant parts of the judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada .
17 These have been considered in depth in the judgments of the Court of Appeal and in the speeches of my noble and learned friends , Lord Keith of Kinkel and Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle ; the principles to be derived from them have been analysed by my noble and learned friend , Lord Goff of Chieveley .
18 As the court held with respect to the expression ‘ matters relating to a contract ’ used in article 5(1) ( see the judgments of 22 March 1983 in Peters [ 1983 ] E.C.R. 987 , and of 8 March 1988 in Arcado [ 1988 ] E.C.R. 1539 ) , having regard to the objectives and general scheme of the Convention , it is important that , in order to ensure as far as possible the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations arising out of the Convention of the contracting states and the persons concerned , that concept should not be interpreted simply as referring to the national law of one or other of the states concerned .
19 In these circumstances , he submits , relying principally upon the judgments of Sir Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson V.-C. in Derby & Co .
20 The judgments of the visitors in In re S. ( A Barrister ) [ 1970 ] 1 Q.B .
21 The facts are fully set out in the judgments of Vinelott J. at first instance [ 1990 ] 1 W.L.R. 204 and of the Court of Appeal [ 1991 ] Ch. 203 .
22 So the rule which confers jurisdiction will also be a rule of recognition , identifying the primary rules through the judgments of the courts and these judgments will become a ‘ source ’ of law …
23 The statement of the relevant facts and evidence are commonly set out at the beginning of the judgment , but in appellate courts they may be incorporated by reference to the judgments of lower courts and may be in the middle of the report of the case if that is where the principal judgment appears .
24 ( The judgments of MAULE and ERLE JJ. are omitted . )
25 Although this is not easy , because comparisons are often made upon data emerging from different initial observations as well as different responses , it does seem to provide an approach whereby the effects of learning can be discerned and differences between the judgments of experts and the inexperienced identified .
26 The activities of people in pictures can be equally puzzling .
27 In Glasser 's book , and in Fraser 's , the activities of the poor can be seen as activities which had been performed , and written about , in the past : but these are books which intimate that the lists and specifications of a caring naturalism — features by which they have indeed been influenced — were never exhaustive : that the truth-tellers did not tell it , and that the omissions were systematic .
28 Patrician insolence has quite often appeared to express a perception of the activities of the levelling Labour governments which have come and gone since 1945 .
29 The civil sphere can also be an arena for coercion , through the activities of vigilantes , private armies , and mobs , irrespective of individual criminal activity .
30 At the same time , despite the popular support for many of the activities of the provisionals north of the border , there is almost no popular support for terrorist activities against the established government in the South .
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