Example sentences of "[conj] in [art] [noun] [noun sg] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 From the House of Lords and the National Union he became a thorn in the flesh of the party leaders , where in a party government it would have been inconceivable that such a man , at the height of his powers and with powerful connections .
2 On the beach or in the changing room it forces us to confront and compare size , shape and sexual attractiveness .
3 The Policy Planning Staff opinion on Kremlin-directed strategy went word for word into the NSC report The position of the United States with respect to Asia ( NSC 48/1 ) whose conclusions were approved by the US President on 30 December 1949 ( NSC 48/2 ) , although in the NSC paper it was an expression that was qualified by the proposition that it was the colonial — nationalist conflict which had provided a fertile field for subversive communist activities .
4 To Wishart , Minton said that in a hangover state he sometimes felt as if his eyeballs had been pulled out , tied in a very complicated knot and pushed back with the knots intact .
5 Already in October 1953 the British defence chiefs had warned that in a world war they expected the main and first Soviet nuclear assault to be directed against the British Isles .
6 South east also doing well and in the south east , looking at the it seems to be the case , one ca n't put too strong an el too strong erm a sort of weight on it but it seems to be the case that in the south east it 's the food , drink and tobacco sector and chemicals which are tending to , to lead the way there erm Scotland also strong export demand .
7 So that in the winter time you put on a a coal fire .
8 They use that in the Oxford dictionary you know .
9 But such people forgot that for most Americans television is an inherently incredible medium , and to the extent that in the King case it might be believable , demonstrated merely that Los Angeles police officers were subduing a human who , out of sight of the video camera , might have been threatening these officers with fists , machine pistol or portable Scud missile .
10 The pavements were narrow , granite slabs set at ankle-wrenching angles , so that in the Sabbath quiet it was pleasanter to walk in the road .
11 There is no doubt that in The Family Reunion he was attempting that re-integration of religious and secular drama which he discussed at the time he was working on the play .
12 If you explain that in the drama lesson you are going to be working together , that you will need their help , that you can not create the drama on your own , you are raising their status , making them important .
13 I thought prisons would be immaculate , and that in the hospital wing they 'd be particularly fussy .
14 This implies that in an operation I(k) we may see I ( ),; but unc will not appear in I(l) operations , except in a self-cancelling form , e.g. we could use I(l) with unc in the ith place , following with I(l) with unc in the jith place , so that the product of the two steps has unit determinant .
15 During the eighteenth century they became thinner and thinner , until in the Regency period they were often only half an inch thick .
16 Her National Gallery choices of pictures were examples of problems posed to artists by colour , and in a video talk she demonstrated how these artistic problems had been solved .
17 Our staff go off duty at 17.30 , and in a god wind they 'll got out to play .
18 They are different from the crows that caw in the trees above our Cages here in the south for their feathers are partly grey and in a moorland mist they seem bigger .
19 His conference speech was marked by the absence of any reference to membership of the European exchange rate mechanism ( ERM ) , and in a BBC interview he added that he would have ‘ no announcement to make about that ’ in his key speech at the Mansion House next week .
20 And in a fairy story I 'd tell him to get lost , ’ Eve said , laughing .
21 And in the afternoon warmth she sank and slept .
22 And in the winter time we used to love to linger in the bakehouse coming home cos it was so warm .
23 If you like cooking and have the time to experiment , there is a recipe section on pages 133–150 , which you might like to try , and in the reading list you will find a selection of recipe books that you might like to dip into .
24 The new locomotive is No. 12 in the fleet at the Moors Valley Railway and in the publicity leaflet it is suggested that it will be named ‘ Pioneer ’ .
25 The new locomotive is No. 12 in the fleet of the Moors Valley Railway and in the publicity leaflet it is suggested that it will be named ‘ Pioneer ’ .
26 ‘ I thought you 'd never ask , ’ she whispered , and in the gathering darkness she heard a ragged sigh just before his head came down and blocked out the stars .
27 Object , stance and mode are broad terms , and in the undergraduate curriculum they take more precise and concrete forms .
28 Before we left , she wrote her phone number on a beer mat and in the car park she slipped it to Werewolf before she put her crash hat on and fired up the engine .
29 Mr Leslie P Wenham completed the 1983 walk , and in the Richmond Review he wrote that he felt ‘ privileged to be an inhabitant of a town such as Richmond ’ , and fortunate ‘ to take part in a 400 year old tradition ’ .
30 In the memory phase it must be able to hear a normal song ; and in the practice phase it must be able to hear its own initially crude efforts , which it compares with a ‘ template ’ of the memorized perfect song .
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