Example sentences of "[det] at the heart " in BNC.
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1 | Her view that we should encourage schools to take up tennis is one that is very much at the heart of our philosophy . |
2 | This approach was very much at the heart of Labour 's 1983 election manifesto . |
3 | Church planting is , I sense , so much at the heart of God for this country at this moment . |
4 | Concerns with the ‘ public ’ and the ‘ private ’ are very much at the heart of Anita Ronke 's sculpture/installation work . |
5 | Better maintenance of the border is a central factor in our policy and it is very much at the heart of the arrangements and agreement that we have with the Irish Government . |
6 | While the bishops were very much at the heart of Innocent 's system of church government there were papal expedients that Innocent used quite extensively that minimized their power . |
7 | In the first speeches , the Jews were above all at the heart of Hitler 's ferocious attacks on war ‘ profiteers ’ , ‘ racketeers ’ , and ‘ parasites ’ — an expression of his brand of populist anti-capitalism . |
8 | Economic matters including interest and exchange rates , monetary and fiscal policy , budgetary policy , are all at the heart of Government and all are to be decided by a central bank , which will be the most important institution . |
9 | This is drawn up by the curriculum committee , which argues that since God , death , suffering and the purpose of life are all at the heart of religion , and since children sometimes ask questions about them , the class teacher should not only teach about these matters , but be subject both to assessment procedures and to official inspection . |
10 | During that eight years ' task , those at the heart of it were learning themselves how to pray more deeply and contemplatively . |
11 | Butler and Stokes " challenge any image of the elector as an informed spectator " , noting how " understanding of policy issues falls away very sharply indeed as we move outwards from those at the heart of political decision-making to the public at large " , and how attitudes are formed towards even the best-known policy issues to only a " limited degree " . |
12 | This use of Shakespeare , the central figure of Anglo-Saxon culture , stresses that the poem is not only about the cultural change in Venice , but about that at the heart of our own language and culture also . |