Example sentences of "as in [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Also , along two sides of mosaic 6 are strips of thorn pattern ( dark on light , as in mosaic B but in contrast to mosaic C , at North Hill ) .
2 Here , the replacement of ivy-scroll decoration by a circular band of saw-tooth is a contrast with the latter two pavements ( the parallels for this type of decoration , again , are found in western England — in the octagonal panelled mosaic from Eastgate Street , Gloucester ; Neal 1981 , no. 57 ) ; but there are still three concentric borders , as in mosaic B , one of which is of simple guilloche .
3 Two ivy leaves joined by a looped fillet recall those of North Hill , mosaic B. The fillet or stem has no kink as in mosaic B but the wide base and narrow tips are familiar .
4 If it were a full merger , the variation observed ( as in variation in RP meat/meet , for instance ) would be insignificant and random .
5 Mandatory refreshment ( as in re-entry programmes ) for returning nurses and health visitors is a separate but related issue to refreshment of practitioners already in the service .
6 Although there is some physiological evidence to support such a co-localization in some cell types such as PC12 cells , most studies indicate that these two receptors operate separate stores , as in sea urchin eggs .
7 But that token Labour force was enough to justify the formation of a National Government in name as well as in purpose .
8 A dark /l/ has a resonance approximating to /u/ as in bill or people .
9 Ludens , who had been watching this face attentively for some time , could now however read in it signs of care , a wrinkling of the brow , not marked exactly in any lines of flesh but as a cloud poised , the mouth and eyes narrowing as in thought or pain , the hints of a perhaps imminent older face .
10 As in art so in ceremony the ruler came often to be represented as Christ .
11 A humanities researcher may use a computer to study strings ( as in natural language processing or the analysis of literary texts ) or to study numbers ( of discrete items or events , as in social and economic history ) or to study icons , whether visual ( as in art history ) , or acoustic ( as in musicology ) .
12 We can distinguish a range of meanings from ( i ) a developed state of mind — as in ‘ a person of culture ’ , ‘ a cultured person ’ to ( ii ) the processes of this development — as in ‘ cultural interests ’ , ‘ cultural activities ’ to ( iii ) the means of these processes — as in culture as ‘ the arts ’ and ‘ humane intellectual works ’ .
13 In on the fourteenth of July of nineteen ninety three the defendant took out a summons with a view to having all the outstanding matters resolved and er this summons came before erm deputy master on the twelfth of August nineteen ninety three and he gave various directions including an enquiry in relation to how the surgery premises er ought to be dealt with as in court in the winding up of the partnership and that matter went before Mr Justice long in December and he decided those issues and gave directions in relation to and how the premises are to be sold , the effect of the directions very vaguely , is that the premises have to be offered to the partners , if only one of the partners shows any interest then there is provision in the relevant deed for ascertaining the price and this is put to that partner at that price , if more than one partner wishes to buy the premises then there is provision for a fixing of a minimum figure and then each of the partners has to put in sealed offers er and the premises will be sold to the partner , the former partner who put in the last offer , that broadly speaking I think is the substance of Mr Justice order .
14 As in Belcourt I think to myself : I am seeing what he saw , the same light , the sky , but it fails to work as it should ; it changes nothing , neither enhances nor diminishes my experience of the place .
15 By the middle of the first century AD a less restrained taste prevailed in idealised art as in portraiture .
16 It is largely analytical , as is English , with the adjective following the noun as in Romance .
17 Nevertheless , in areas where a carbonate platform is developed , as in N.E. England and the southern North Sea , a similar model to that applied to Z2 and Z3 Carbonates presumably can be used , and it should be possible to make tentative predictions of porosity distribution from isopach maps ( Fig. 4a ) .
18 As we saw , the latter relation threatened to compromise the son 's masculinity and to force him into a passive , feminine relation to his mother which could result either in abject surrender , as in depression , or in defiant revolt , as in mania .
19 Wheeler clicked his tongue , as much in irritation that the conversation should continue so long without his leading it as in deprecation of the mention of police , and past history discreditable to the Church .
20 Pop music ( as in chart music ) has a habit of sweeping whole areas aside to make way for newer , equally lightweight material from an equally sickly new wave .
21 Planning is valuable for solving irreversible search , as in cooking .
22 In wartime as in peace-time , the seas are open to all . ’
23 Under this interpretation , actions which originate from ‘ inside ’ the self are those which are seen as in accordance with conscious desires or intentions , and those which originate from ‘ outside ’ the self are those which one would not do if one were not coerced .
24 All such rights , powers , liabilities , obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties , and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties , as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law , and be enforced , allowed and followed accordingly : and the expression ‘ enforceable Community right ’ and similar expressions shall be read as referring to one to which this subsection applies .
25 ‘ All such rights , powers , liabilities , obligations and restrictions from time to time created or arising by or under the Treaties , and all such remedies and procedures from time to time provided for by or under the Treaties , as in accordance with the Treaties are without further enactment to be given legal effect or used in the United Kingdom shall be recognised and available in law , and be enforced , allowed and followed accordingly . ’
26 Its sees its involvement with Eo as in keeping with its strategy of strengthening its technological and product base through strategic alliances , and as complementary to its other activities in what it calls the ‘ the new telecom world ’ .
27 This as in keeping with the style of the palace itself .
28 This respect has always had to be defended — in architecture , as in painting , sculpture and archaeology .
29 In writing , as in painting , Emily Carr was a master craftsman .
30 As in painting , the shift to the modern in Berlin theatre took two steps .
  Next page