Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] themselves [art] " in BNC.

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1 A delegation from Europe 's largest hotel , the Izmailovo in Moscow , recently visited the Moat House International Hotel , Glasgow , to see for themselves the operating standards of a western hotel .
2 Winston sent out a party of men and women from public life to see for themselves the horrors of Belsen .
3 This has been configured so that visitors to the Museum can see in the cockpit and operate the flying controls to see for themselves the effects of stick on elevators and rudder .
4 LENTA organised parties of business people and senior ILEA personnel to see for themselves the achievements of the Boston Compact .
5 Still others are there to show their sympathy and respect , but also to see for themselves the spectacle of a city 's mass grief …
6 Now they began to see for themselves the amazing interconnected web of life which links the creatures and plants on Denmark Farm , and the critical role which each link plays in maintaining the chain of existence — the working ecological system .
7 They set off from Wyre Mill to see for themselves the finishing touches being put to the weir nearby .
8 The home provides a safe and secure place for children to ask their biggest questions about faith and to discover for themselves the love of God in Jesus Christ .
9 By helping teachers understand classroom roles , it enables them to discover for themselves the best ways of fostering co-operative learning .
10 In this way , pupils will have the opportunity to discover for themselves the reasons for their beliefs , values and opinions .
11 It naturally combines with the view that individuals should develop freely to find for themselves the form of the good which they wish to pursue in their life .
12 But Stanislavskian actors are nevertheless concerned in rehearsal and other preparation time with tapping their own reservoirs of emotional memories to find within themselves a sophistication , subtlety or depth of emotional engagement so that in concentrating on the character 's actions , a wider , deeper range of emotions may be released .
13 If adult human beings wish to impose upon themselves an inappropriate and inefficient diet , that is their own business .
14 Lucy Honeychurch 's generation are trying to assert their right to choose for themselves the path of their lives .
15 Or should policy concentrate more on clarifying the goals and outcomes of learning , and on providing the kind of support which will enable schools to identify for themselves the best possible ways of achieving such goals and outcomes ?
16 In his work with teachers , especially through in-service courses , he put them into a " classroom " situation to experience for themselves the materials of art .
17 Fortunately it was a warm afternoon and many colleagues took the opportunity to discuss among themselves the significance of the Maastricht events on the terrace overlooking the Thames .
18 From the middle of the thirteenth century they were allowed to deduct for themselves a fixed salary out of the Forest revenues they collected — 100 marks a year for the Justice of the Forest north of Trent , and £100 for his colleague south of it .
19 And it all comes back to what I was saying earlier about trying to get kids to believe in themselves a little bit .
20 As self-governing bodies , local education authorities are , by and large , free to decide for themselves the amount of money they will spend on education .
21 Magyars , Roumanians , Serbs , Bulgars , Arnauts ( Albanians ) , Greeks and Turks will then finally be in a position to settle their own mutual disputes without the intervention of foreign powers , to settle among themselves the bounds of their individual national territories , to manage their internal affairs according to their own judgement .
22 This is different from straightforward part-time employment because job-sharing requires those concerned to arrange among themselves the distribution of the hours of a full-time employee .
23 This is part of the normal regime — they have to arrange among themselves the cleaning , etc. , and also have to do other manual jobs from time to time for example yesterday , they all had to go out and plant castor oil seeds in the campus grounds .
24 In such cases they were often allowed to take for themselves an annual salary out of those revenues .
25 In the classroom , cultural analysis encourages students to examine for themselves the underlying assumptions in the texts they are studying .
26 A firm identification allows daughters to take inside themselves the resources of their mothers so that when their time comes they , too , are equipped as parents .
27 Local authorities , although not being party to the devolution of the NHS provision , would have to be asked to take upon themselves a serious long-term support role .
28 For the courts to take upon themselves the task of making this determination is a stultifying , even a discrediting , exercise .
29 It takes three generations to make a gentleman , they say ; but the sons and daughters of impoverished immigrants into London in Victorian times were only one remove from their humble roots elsewhere — every reason , therefore , to collect around themselves the trappings of grandeur .
30 Nor are viewers left to make for themselves the link between the ‘ nation of arch fanatics led by an arch fanatic ’ that confronted The Young Mr Pitt ( 1942 ) and Britain 's contemporary enemies .
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