Example sentences of "[art] [noun] bring [adv prt] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The effect , therefore , of only the first limb applying , ie before the change in the law bringing in the second limb , could be seen by the following example .
2 Although the conference brought about the first international agreement on a multilateral adjustment in exchange rates , it did not prevent the collapse of the adjustable peg system .
3 The housekeeper brought in the first dish .
4 He mentioned the need to bring out the practical application of subjects , in ways which would enhance rather than displace theoretical understanding .
5 The treaty was eventually ratified but the crisis brought down the Kishi government and produced the most widespread political protests of the postwar years .
6 Their paths are logarithmic spirals , which means that each orbit of the pole brings about the same proportional enlargement of their distance from the pole .
7 ITV is involved in a race with the BBC to bring out the first film drama of his life .
8 I felt that he might be the person to bring out the spiritual element in Joyce 's life , as well as the comedy .
9 ‘ I believe that the real difference between success and failure in a corporation can very often be traced to the question of how well the organisation brings out the great energies and talents of its people .
10 Talbot was on deck when the launch brought back the six survivors .
11 Councillor Robert Lee , of West Lothian , said he was certain that , when the Government brought in the right-to-buy scheme , it had not intended that people should be able to buy , with discount , more than once .
12 The Government brought in the new law after inspectors found that 97 per cent of ‘ pints ’ contained less .
13 In 1838 a troop of Nottinghamshire dragoons and the metropolitan police were attacked with stones and bricks and in 1839 the government brought in the 5th Dragoon guards to suppress the bull-running once and for all .
14 The Treaty brings about the formal transformation of what has hitherto been an Economic Community into a Union which is mandated to act in many areas on behalf of its own citizens , and to claim their allegiance .
15 Just the thing to bring down the evil empire .
16 At a recent NRA seminar for interested parties , speakers from the NRA brought out the key points of the plan and explained to delegates what the scheme is all about ( Chem .
17 The commotion brought in the new duty officer , a tall and muscular young lieutenant with a sad , world-weary face .
18 He and Kelly had only been together five minutes but the photographs brought back the full nightmarish shame of it all .
19 Alternatively the ‘ success ’ in ( 37 ) could have been the product of into him by evolution , thereby providing him with the power to bring about the desired result himself .
20 Mr Sillars accused the leadership of unravelling ten years of work by party activists — a reference to the SNP decision to vote with the Tories to bring down the Labour government in 1979 which led to the taunt ‘ Tartan Tories ’ .
21 The pair are to leave their families at their Wirral homes and motor hundreds of miles in a race to bring back the first bottles of Beaujolais to Liverpool .
22 But mixing it with the hard men of football is no problem for a kid brought up the hard way on the mean streets of Leicester .
23 Here the impression is that the object of make is given no choice but to perform the action expressed by the infinitive : in ( 147 ) the speaker even uses make to decline any personal responsibility for what he did — he was " acting under coercion " , a paraphrase bringing out the concurrent nature of the causation involved in these sentences .
24 It is an art to bring out the best without telling a visual lie .
25 At the same time the success of the West German foreign minister , Hans-Dietrich Genscher , in getting an agreement to bring out the thousands of East Germans from the West German embassies in Prague and Warsaw in the 24 hours before the polls closed boosted the results of his small Free Democrat party .
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