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

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1 In the future , therefore , we must encourage publishers to be a little more forthcoming about the basis on which they offer readability data , and look carefully to see whether what they have calculated really is the population mean of the book in question .
2 The risks of a fall in profitability are covered by base capital ( 25 per cent of a firm 's annual costs ) , whilst position capital is held to protect against large falls in share prices in those shares held .
3 Therefore , it seems shareholders should absorb the risks of an enterprise in preference to management doing so .
4 I would be content to keep the events locked away in my head , if only out of plain charity , or respect for those other characteristics of the person in question which to some extent balance or even explain the apparent iniquities of his behaviour .
5 I would be content to keep the events locked away in my head , if only out of plain charity , or respect for those other characteristics of the person in question which to some extent balance or even explain the apparent iniquities of his behaviour . ’
6 How competent are the teachers in each setting for dealing with the specific characteristics of the child in question ?
7 For example , in an ARTEP study of export zones in Sri Lanka , South Korea , the Philippines , Malaysia and India , Maex ( 1983 ) demonstrates that poor wages and conditions are explained better by the characteristics of the workforce in zone industries ( mainly young women ) , than by their location or the ownership of the plants .
8 On Nov. 12 Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis proposed a reorganization of the government in order to move toward the formation of a Cabinet of ministers .
9 All were CPSU members and Yazov , Yanayev and Kryuchkov had been politburo members , though after the reorganization of the party in July 1990 [ see p. 37614-17 ] , following the March abolition of its constitutional monopoly on power [ see p. 37299 ] , government ministers could no longer be on the party 's ruling bodies .
10 In essence , then , the scope of a harmonizing measure is determined by the nature and extent of the problem to be tackled , the function of the particular body undertaking the measure , and the feasibility of the project in terms of ability to reach agreement within a reasonable time-frame .
11 Whenever a preliminary selection has been made the student should be encouraged to consider the feasibility of the topic in terms of the resource implications and other constraints .
12 Frank Card went to the 1991 Conference of the Consumer Credit Association of the UK in October
13 The article reported a survey by the National Solid Waste Management Association of the change in landfill capacity over the past five years .
14 Teenagers from at least six local schools attended the event which was aimed at students thinking of a career in technology .
15 A keen traveller , in 1896 Rawnsley was sent as a newspaper correspondent to cover the coronation of the tsar in Moscow , and three years later toured the eastern states of the USA as ambassador for the National Trust .
16 On one occasion he kicked at a fence which was enclosing a footpath , saying ' I have no respect for the Whigs , but I have a good deal of the Chartist in me' .
17 But this dichotomy is , itself , a great deal of the trouble in St Ann 's .
18 Following crisis meetings with opposition leaders on Sept. 28-29 , the President announced the lifting of a curfew in force since Sept. 25 , and said that the national conference , which had been again been suspended on Sept. 17 , would reconvene on Oct. 1 .
19 Recent research by the Advertising Research Unit indicates that an adult-like perception of the imagery in cigarette advertisements develops over the years 10 to 14 ; certainly it is well established by 16 years .
20 Public perception of the war in Europe was of a senseless conflict fought out in the mud and filth of Flanders , with thousands killed each day for the sake of only a few yards of territory soon lost in the next offensive .
21 After meetings and discussions , the proposals were formulated for displays of 18 , 19 and 20 century wares , set in the beautiful period room settings of the museum in Hoorn .
22 Rovers enjoyed the bulk of the possession in Friday 's 1-1 draw with Peterborough but failed to turn their superiority into goals .
23 The factor which accounts for the bulk of the variance in responses ( 27 per cent ) is composed of attitudes towards the process of SSE , with its product , the bringing about of changes in schools , being only weakly correlated , suggesting that teachers simply do not see evaluation as necessarily linked to subsequent action .
24 It was clear from Mr Lamont 's comments that he hopes the restructuring of the system will improve the investment climate for larger projects which create the bulk of the jobs in platform yards and oil-related engineering work .
25 It had been a deliberate ploy to record the bulk of the tracks in Liverpool in order to keep The Smiths away well and truly away from the metropolis of London .
26 Rising wages were important for markets primarily because workers ' additional spending accounted for the bulk of the growth in consumption expenditure .
27 In my judgment the reasoning of the court in Watt v. Rama [ 1972 ] V.R. 353 adopted by Potts J. in B. v. Islington Health Authority [ 1991 ] 1 Q.B .
28 ‘ I do not find it easy to reconcile this ruling of Viscount Dilhorne , which was as I understand central to the answer which the House gave to the certified question , with the reasoning of the House in Reg. v. Morris [ 1984 ] A.C. 320 .
29 I do not find it easy to reconcile this ruling of Viscount Dilhorne , which was as I understand central to the answer which the House gave to the certified question , with the reasoning of the House in Reg. v. Morris [ 1984 ] A.C. 320 .
30 The words ‘ I ask you , son , to care for the lands which will come to you with your usual diligence and look after them so that they may come to your sons ’ , although they do not sufficiently express a trust but advice rather than obligation to leave the lands , are none the less regarded as having the force of a trust in favour of the grandsons after the death of their father .
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