Example sentences of "[adv] [art] limited [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Because of their beauty such villages are also more subject to draconian planning policies which may prevent any new development at all or restrict it to only the limited in-filling of low-density private housing .
2 Plato 's main ( if misguided ) objection to traditional art was that it represented only the limited reality of the empirical world .
3 The SEA is basically a limited set of changes to the Treaty of Rome which allows for majority voting in the Council of Ministers in areas connected to establishing the Internal Market , and also has some rather vague references to EMU , Political Union and other policy areas such as the environment .
4 As the HLA-A2.1 molecules on T2 cells appear to carry only a limited variety of peptides derived from signal sequences , our data suggest that the anti-HLA-A2.1 CTL clone recognizes such a signal sequence-derived peptide .
5 However , it has been my experience that composition students do not sufficiently exploit their harmonic knowledge , often using only a limited vocabulary .
6 In brief , then , EC countries currently enjoy only a limited degree of monetary autonomy and this applies only to the very short run .
7 Therefore only a limited reduction of ambiguity will be obtained .
8 Chameleons experience only a limited colour-change , instigated by factors beyond their control .
9 The police pursue policies of differential deployment ( for example , swamping certain parts of London where the West Indian population is prominent ) and ‘ methodological suspicion ’ ( that is , routinely suspecting only a limited proportion of the population , particularly those with criminal records or known criminal associates ) .
10 To yank someone entirely out of their time and smack them around for not being of our time is perhaps a salutary but only a limited exercise .
11 Consequently , secondary-school pupils in China have only a limited opportunity to go into higher education and in this sense , those who do make it can be viewed as a privileged elite .
12 Suppose that , although our reader is primarily interested in asbestos roofing , only a limited quantity of material directly concerned with this topic is represented in a collection .
13 In fact the survey was only a limited success because rather few observers took part .
14 The Rev. Thomas Arnold , founder of the Oral School for the Deaf at Northampton in 1868 after trying out the system with only a limited success with a special class at the Yorkshire Institution where that great advocate of sign language , Charles Baker , was Principal , did probably more than any other person to establish the oral system in Britain with the fine academic record of his school .
15 This important step towards the development of a national system was only a limited success .
16 The Yasa allowed for only a limited selection of penalties under the law .
17 In longer pieces composers often use varied keys , so as to have a more chromatic language at their disposal and to avoid the stagnation of using only a limited selection of notes .
18 Nevertheless , the party made only a limited concession ; Home Rule 's suspension was real , and every attempt to implement it in wartime provoked sufficient Unionist outrage to stop it .
19 But so far we have considered only a limited part of the environment , namely the weather .
20 Class positions and economic power may again be only a limited part of the explanation .
21 The Bohemian party saw only a limited part of the country , landing in Kent , and travelling via London to Reading , Salisbury and Poole , whence they sailed to France .
22 The corollary is that some catalogue information has only a limited life , since it may in its turn be overtaken by new research .
23 The scheme covers only some pollutants , and the AQMD has only a limited monitoring capacity .
24 Section 12(3) applies to a contract where it appears from the contract or is to be inferred from the circumstances that the parties intended that the seller should transfer only a limited title ( whether it be the limited title of the seller himself or of some third person from whom the seller would obtain it ) .
25 These factors have only a limited relationship with the reader 's age but will largely determine whether a young reader ‘ sticks with ’ or abandons the reading .
26 There is , in fact , only a limited relationship between scientific understanding and the social practices that draw support from science .
27 It is boring , often done in locations where it is difficult to avoid ‘ bosses ’ , it affords only a limited range of ‘ bluffs ’ or easing techniques , and is looked down upon by regular policemen and women , a view unintentionally reinforced by those sergeants who apologize to regulars when asking them at parade to do sanger duty .
28 They give high selectivity for one product , but so far only a limited range of reactions falls within their scope .
29 The legal profession offers only a limited range of negative criteria , although there exist many eulogies of good practice from which rules of conduct could be extrapolated by a neophyte practitioner ( e.g. Malcolm 1966 ; Megarry 1962 ) .
30 ‘ Thus , although Dillons discounts only a limited range of titles , the knock-on effect of its advertising campaign and aggressive marketing is that it brings people into its shops , and generates the belief that all books are cheaper in Dillons , not just discounted titles .
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