Example sentences of "[noun] to [art] [adj] [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 By uncovering the contribution made by ‘ serious ’ religion to the wider Ulster society by c1900 this study will make more comprehensible many neglected aspects of life and custom in the twentieth-century Ulster .
2 Ten of these are the successors to the regional water authorities and they also provide sewerage services .
3 With this class of playing the listener is led to a conviction that at last there may be in due time successors to the distinguished Beaux Arts Trio indeed , in their approach and enjoyment of the music they play there are parallels .
4 One teacher I interviewed in my middle school study , for instance , felt she had not been well treated in the reorganization to a middle school set-up and had resisted the head 's attempts at change ‘ We do n't , some of us do n't change so easily ! ’
5 ‘ When we were messing around last year , we were playing the same songs to the same music biz people , ’ asserts softly-spoken guitarist Bernard Butler , softly .
6 The Front for the Defence of Malagasy Socialism ( FMSM — an alliance led by Jérôme Marojama Razanabahiny of Vonjy ) , was set up by the government as a counterweight to the new opposition parties .
7 To confirm the stability at the genetic level , both restriction endonuclease digestion and Southern blot analysesusing 32 P-labelled probes to the individual BTV genes were performed for all three recombinant viruses after four passages .
8 Referee Bob Nixon was told of the outburst and immediately showed the red card to the big target man .
9 Clearly the improvement of the unemployment situation in Scotland during the 1970s owes a great deal to the new employment opportunities created by the discovery of North Sea oil , whereas the political troubles in Ireland have had an adverse effect on the local employment situation there .
10 We owe a great deal to the United Nations Secretary-General and to Mr. Picco who have worked tirelessly with others to secure the release of the hostages .
11 On a dark and icy cold morning in January 1946 I flew in an RAF plane from Berlin to Kiel and then drove in a jeep to a British Army Church House a few miles outside the city .
12 And that he bequeathed his carp pond to the local Boy Scouts ?
13 Loud music , screaming and shouting are torture to the delicate hearing apparatus of the typical feline .
14 The decision is regretted , particularly by Fitzgerald Lighting whose three year link with the Bodmin and Wenford Railway had been a major boost to the embryonic steam line 's fortunes .
15 Accommodating the exiled Kuwaitis has given a boost to the depressed property market , especially in the Eastern Province , where rents have tripled in the past year .
16 Such faith is a timely boost to the former Blaydon Harrier as she prepares to partner McColgan in the British women 's team at the World Cross Country Championships in Boston on Saturday .
17 He said under Labour the money would be used to give a boost to the local construction trade and help many of the town 's homeless families .
18 The grant gives a significant boost to the National Park Authority 's Barns and Walls Conservation Scheme to protect drystone walls and scattered stone field barns in upper Swaledale and Arkengarthdale .
19 FOYLE Meats has given a big boost to the National Sheep Association , which holds its multi-breed ram sale at Antrim on September 21 .
20 In name and authority of our Sovereign Lord and Lady ( Francis and Mary ) , ( the Convention ) suspends the said commission granted by our said Sovereigns to the said Queen Dowager ’ .
21 The effect of this so-called organic basis to corporate structure at law may create problems in the event of a transition from a surveying partnership to a limited liability company .
22 This in effect gives statutory force to the judicial monitoring procedure which was introduced in 1980 .
23 The Norwegian government announced its decision on Oct. 19 to link the krone to the European currency unit ( ECU ) as a move towards closer association with the EC .
24 It welcomed the October 1990 linking of the krone to the European currency unit ( ECU ) [ see p. 37782 ] , as offering " the possibility of longer-term stabilization and efficiency gains for the economy " .
25 There were also financial losses to the British Electricity Authority from having to operate old and inefficient plant for more extended periods than they would have chosen in normal times : in the early 1950s the extra cost of burning scarce coal inefficiently was reckoned at £3½ millions a year at the low official coal prices of the time , though the real resource cost was somewhat higher than this .
26 The near-disaster had galvanized the general consciousness to a higher adrenaline level , probably because Xanthe had not , in fact , been carried off like Angelica .
27 These ‘ plastic chickens ’ from Foster Refrigerator send infra-red signals to a portable data printer .
28 Cooler fresh water changes usually trigger pairs into a spawning sequence ( which can last a whole day ) with their signals to the natural breeding clock .
29 Thirteen years as auxiliary Bishop in one of the largest diocese in England provided a wealth of experience and opportunities for reflection which Bishop Augustine Harris brought with him when he came to Middlesbrough in November 1978 , as the fifth bishop of the diocese , in succession to the late Bishop John .
30 Father Andrew Ryder SCJ , of the Sacred Heart Church , Wythenshawe , is the new Episcopal Vicar for Religious , in succession to the late Father Gerard Hanley .
  Next page