Example sentences of "[art] children [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 It included cartoons of them house-hunting in Katmandu and the children building sandcastles on holiday in Wales .
2 Oh yes varied , and there interesting , with , with children , particularly if they erm if I 'm doing workshops er with art and writing workshops and we come across an abstract picture , the children music , and , we , as a way into their vocabulary which is n't as large as their , their writing skills , and there 'll , there 'll decipher an abstract picture , wonderful language and I like doing that you know
3 He was part of a mission by the Feed the Children charity which distributed £36,000 worth of food , medical supplies and clothing to Croatian refugees .
4 The Save the Children Charity has organised a tabletop sale on March 14 at the Arts Centre , Vane Terrace , Darlington , from 10am until 2pm .
5 The Save the Children Charity has organised a tabletop sale on March 14 at the Arts Centre , Vane Terrace , Darlington , from 10am until 2pm .
6 That was the Save the Children slogan last year , and £5m. was raised and a great many lives were saved .
7 It was unclear where responsibility for child-minders , registration of playgroups , etc. would rest in the new organisation , but it was possible that the new provisions in the Children Bill going through parliament would allow for those services to be provided through education departments .
8 The Group believed that the Children Bill further eroded the already inadequate rights of poor families by allowing for the progressive transfer of parental rights to foster-parents and by widening the powers to dispense with parental consent to adoption .
9 Later , in June 1989 , it was reported that she was proposing to the Lord Chancellor that the Children Bill should reverse a decision which she and other members of the Court of Appeal had felt obliged to make excluding hearsay evidence .
10 As the preceding paragraphs have shown , child care is , until the Children Bill becomes law in the early 1990s , based on the Child Care Act 1980 , under which one major duty of the local authorities is to receive children into care and provide them with adequate substitute homes unless or until they can be returned to their natural parents .
11 On 18 May 1989 , in Standing Committee B , I moved an amendment to the Children Bill , supported by my hon. Friend the Member for Monklands , West ( Mr. Clarke ) , which would have required all local authorities to appoint a children 's rights officer .
12 ( Scotland ) Bill two ; the Dock Work Bill ; the Football Spectators Bill ; the Children Bill ; the Companies Bill ; the Local Government and Housing Bill ; the Employment Bill ; the National Health Service and Community Care Bill two ; the Social Security Bill two ; the Human Fertilisation and Embryo Bill one ; the Education ( Student Loans ) Bill ; the Community Charges ( General Reduction ) Bill ; the Dangerous Dogs Bill two ; the Local Government Finance Bill ; the Education ( Schools ) Bill ; the Further and Higher Education Bill — which we are now discussing — one .
13 Because Boo had not been seen for so long by Maycomb , he was turned into a scapegoat by the adults who blamed him for any thing and every thing that went wrong , and the children thought of him as a terrible monster with blood dripping from his mouth who ate squirrels .
14 In 1918 , after the vote had been granted to women over thirty , she resigned from the WFL presidency and devoted herself to a range of issues , including the Save the Children campaign , the Indian independence movement , theosophy , the Labour party and the early British Communist party , the London Vegetarian Society , and the Irish Self Determination League .
15 Organisations dealing with problems like Julie 's say the chances of getting the children back are slim .
16 child sex abuse you know where the children abuse other children
17 For tea , give the children banana sandwiches and shape the birthday cake like a banana .
18 It may happen when parents have indoctrinated their children , that is , laid down a set of beliefs without allowing the children freedom to think for themselves and to come up with their own reactions .
19 The Children Act by Katja Faber .
20 The court 's powers in regard to the protection and custody of children are constantly revised by Parliament , as for example in the substantial Family Law Act 1986 and the Children Act 1989 .
21 Under the Children Act 1975 an adopted child has the same right to succeed on the intestacy of his adoptive parent as any other child born to that parent .
22 For many foster parents the strain imposed by the rights of natural parents and extra paperwork required under the Children Act which came into force last year could cause them to give up , she went on .
23 The Children Act : Looking Forward , Looking Back JEAN PACKMAN and BILL JORDAN
24 As the Children Act waits , poised for implementation , it remains to speculate on how significant and successful it is likely to be : and it is tempting to do so with benefit of hindsight in the context of all the discarded child care legislation of the past forty years .
25 For example , voluntary organizations played , and will continue to play , a central role in the provision of children 's services ; they were also influential in shaping new child care legislation ( for example : The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and the Children Act , 1908 ; Association of British Adoption Agencies and the 1975 Children Act ) .
26 This Government introduced the Children Act , a landmark in legislation to protect children .
27 We will ensure that the standards implemented through the Children Act are applied sensibly , and do not discourage private or voluntary arrangements which are often best suited to the needs of children and parents .
28 Protecting children will be high on the agenda , as will the full implementation of the Children Act and the UN Convention to promote childrens rights .
29 But how far have the changes in child care law embodied in the Children Act 1989 , with its focus on the paramountcy of the child 's welfare ( as a means to the child 's better protection ) , and the increasing emphasis which has been placed on parental responsibility rather than rights by the courts in recent years , been mirrored by changes in the balance of power between parent , child and state in education ?
30 The law on school attendance acts as a rather crude instrument in this regard , although the child-centred philosophy of the Children Act 1989 extends into the area of school attendance and perhaps offers a more appropriate method of enforcing parental responsibility .
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