Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [art] [noun] in [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Her work for the early suffrage campaigns also began in the mid-1870s , when she lectured widely for the cause in London , Manchester , Birmingham , and elsewhere . |
2 | ‘ Behind Bars ’ at the new , huge , non-profit Threadwaxing Space on Broadway is not as you might suspect a show of political art about prisoners ' rights or even about the exotic lives of cocktail waitresses but rather about the stripe in art . |
3 | Because such structures are ‘ conventional , and hence culturally variable ’ ( van Dijk and Kintsch 1983:16 ) the language learner , in order to be able to operate effectively as a participant in discourse , needs to be able both to identify what type of discourse he or she is involved in , and to predict how it will typically be structured . |
4 | He took small parts in ballets by Ashton ( a courtier at the ball in the premiere of Cinderella , one of the revellers in the cave scene of Apparitions ) and de Valois ( Checkmate , Don Quixote and Job ) , walked on as a pall-bearer in Helpmann 's Hamlet , and appeared in the classics , where his most prominent parts were a mazurka dancer in Swan Lake and a marquess in the hunting scene of The Sleeping Beauty . |
5 | Kevin Gallacher , brought on as a substitute in Berne , should be in the starting line-up against Portugal . |
6 | A wooden lid carved with a winged griffin and a deer in a rocky landscape was found at Saqqara in Egypt ; Sinclair Hood ( 1978 , pp. 115–16 ) suggests that it may be the work of a Minoan wood carver working in 1450–1400 BC , perhaps as a captive in Mycenae : if so , it is a rare survival of Minoan wood carving . |
7 | Then I work out much I want to sell each work for : my first painting sold for £25 , a small fortune then for an art student , and enough for a holiday in Italy . |
8 | It can not have been easy for a man in his fifties to start afresh as an instrument-maker in London . |
9 | The basic requirements for the grant of a patent are stated in section 1(1) of the Patents Act 1977 as follows : A patent may be granted only for an invention in respect of which the following conditions are satisfied , that is to say — a ) the invention is new ; b ) it involves an inventive step ; c ) it is capable of industrial application ; d ) the grant of a patent for it is not excluded by subsections ( 2 ) and ( 3 ) below … |
10 | All in all , building your own machine can be a worthwhile exercise — not only for the savings in cost , but also for the experience and knowledge you will gain to give you a greater understanding of your Personal Computer . |
11 | but we must sort of all pull in together as a situation in Scotland now that which really concerns me and I 'd |
12 | Even more striking were the elephants that once lived on Malta , and were only about a metre in height . |
13 | I am not talking only about the position in countries such as Germany or Japan , but about second or third-world countries . |
14 | Higher pay is not , therefore , only about an increase in living standards , although this is crucially important , but in gaining respect and an idea of one 's worth from the rest of the community . |
15 | One specimen in my own tank has tentacles about a foot long , whereas the body of the worm , in its sand tube , is only about an inch in length . |
16 | ‘ Well , ’ Yanto began hastily , ‘ I was told he got pinned down for a week in no-man 's land during the battle of the Somme in 1916 . |
17 | he 's applied to the Metropolitan police , he 's going down for an interview in June |
18 | FORMER Liberal leader Sir David Steel yesterday urged Labour to stand down for the Liberal-Democrats in seats they can not win at the next Election . |
19 | John talked , quickly and urgently , while Patrick drove along the M4 , crossed the Chiswick and Hammersmith Flyovers and slowed down for the traffic in Cromwell Road . |
20 | Sir Hector , who will have his own form to fill in as a farmer in Dumfriesshire , says in the letter : ‘ I recognise that many of you will be fed up at the prospect of yet more literature and more form filling . |
21 | They pace together through the forest in silence , scanning the canopy intently , sometimes stopping and listening for the calls of colobus . |
22 | I 'll have booked in for a course in Bristol starting in September — an art course , no one cares what art students look like — or drama maybe . |
23 | I realized that this was the same place Brian and I had been held in for a week in May 1988 before going to the Pit . |
24 | At this time he developed a feeling for courses and put in for every course in sight . |
25 | He does n't bring them safely home and , you know , have them all securely ti er closed in for the night in safety and security , he leaves them in the wilderness . |
26 | He stared eagerly about the room in search of the prettiest faces , but instead caught sight of Lieutenant Harry Webster , one of his own British aides , who was hurrying across the dance floor . |
27 | The two legends came together for a race in aid of the charity , Comic Relief . |
28 | For anyone who still needs convincing that Craig is first and foremost a guitarist he quotes an incident that happened when the Y-Fronts got back together for a gig in Melbourne , during the time he was with Neighbours . |
29 | The trio were together for a Christmas in Vienna concert in the city hall . |
30 | The fundamental issue here ( especially for the arts in education ) appears to be how schools can be more effectively alerted to developments in education . |