Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [art] whole " in BNC.

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1 Within lesson structures of this kind , teachers do not , in fact , orientate themselves so much to the needs of individual students , but tend to treat the whole class as a kind of ‘ collective student ’ .
2 It was the latter 's son Joseph , now about 55 , who lived to see the whole enterprise brought to a halt by the hostilities .
3 Having failed in its attempt to induce individuals by offering to pay £1,000 per borehole , it is now attempting a new strategy which involves inducing the whole community .
4 Since Croydon Corporation 's tramway system was leased to the B.E.T. , the fact that the Penge services and the Mitcham/Sutton services would be separated by about two miles of Corporation owned track was thought to be of little consequence and it was intended to work the whole system as one with lengthy through services , under the ‘ Croydon & District Tramways ’ fleet name .
5 ‘ He does n't want to know the whole picture anymore .
6 Novels are much more difficult to place and from a new writer , publishers normally want to see the whole book .
7 Only if you want to go the whole way and produce typeset quality data will you ever need to consider anything better than VGA .
8 Many women believed that these reforms involved transforming the whole tenor of English public life and creating an ethical and moral climate founded on the teachings of religion .
9 Swoon director Tom Kalin — he wants to seduce the whole nation with his New Queer Cinema
10 You do n't need to drain the whole system — just enough so that water does n't come out of the immersion heater boss .
11 The Carstairs system ( after Joseph Carstairs , died 1820 ) involved using the whole forearm in the business of writing , instead of just the fingers .
12 The Salman Rushdie affair has given a whole new meaning to both anti-racist and black community politics .
13 A company director has given a whole new meaning to the term ’ house painting ’ .
14 ‘ Malcolm Marshall coming back has given the whole place and all the players such a lift . ’
15 That has given the whole company a step up , including Crate , who , as we mentioned earlier , are now making use of the systems that I came here with . ’
16 A club spokesman said : ‘ It was a win over an in-form side that has given the whole team great hope and we will go to Wasps with nothing to lose . ’
17 Sir , The current debate on fair competition between booksellers and book clubs has exposed a whole area of concerns for booksellers .
18 Does America really need to leap a whole generation ahead in fighter technology , to build an aeroplane that can beat undreamed-of Russian fighters of the undreamed-of Russia of the next century ?
19 The web of confusion that has surrounded the whole Nimslo venture is now so tangled that not even Nimslo can say exactly how much investment the company has attracted .
20 We have already noted that lawyers can be expected to provide a whole range of help which would certainly include information , advice and assistance .
21 He has let the whole school down . ’
22 The development of sophisticated computer techniques has added a whole new dimension to this ‘ post-production ’ stage of commercial-making .
23 As the perspective on teacher education widens to span the whole career of the teacher and as the work of teacher-preparation courses becomes far more closely linked to the
24 After detailing her mental history he added , ‘ Lotte has vivid fantasies and has built a whole world of dreams .
25 Mr Corman has shot the whole thing in colour and in a cinema-verité style that makes it resemble a documentary . ’
26 Consequently , it alone , of all our domesticated animals , has absorbed the whole attention , until very lately , of the professors of that establishment .
27 The history of the British car industry ( refer to Chapter 4 ) , which has seen a whole series of mergers , is one example which shows that the potential benefits of mergers are not automatically secured .
28 ‘ I just ca n't believe it may all go to waste , ’ says Alison Knapp , a theatre manager who has seen the whole project through since it was first planned in 1983 .
29 She has seen the whole thing .
30 And the very word has named a whole religious movement .
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