Example sentences of "[vb -s] [art] whole [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Thing is , he was christened that way , and he hates the whole moviestar bit . |
2 | And mine 's is the , the one , the tape cos she just records the whole room . |
3 | He nowhere confronts the whole issue of menstruation and childbirth , which marked woman as either ritually unclean or sinful . |
4 | Started by Pauline Jaricot at the age of 17 Now involves the whole Church in helping the world |
5 | Its practical underpinning is ‘ orthofunction ’ : a teaching method which involves the whole person physically and mentally and which instils ‘ the ability to function as members of society , to participate in normal social settings appropriate to their age ’ . |
6 | It is an activity which involves the whole person and calls for sympathetic imagination , sensitivity and constant self-criticism . |
7 | Forum Theatre can usefully be seen as small group work which involves the whole group as active spectators . |
8 | Hard , dry cough racks the whole chest . |
9 | She started taking stands at antique fairs in Kent , and at weekends or during school holidays the whole family plus dogs would go on expeditions to Wales , the West Country and East Anglia . |
10 | We ca n't just inflict heavy penalties , however , as that drives the whole business underground , as in the Mediterranean countries . |
11 | The side-dots are odd in that black dots alternate with white dots set into big black squares , and I think that from the player 's viewpoint this almost spoils the whole line of the guitar . |
12 | You will notice that this inference contains the built-in assumption that whatever went on on Earth is likely to have gone on elsewhere in the universe , and this begs the whole question . |
13 | Could I point out to members that we did have er written replies to try and speed up the question process , could I ask members both in asking the question and especially in answering , not to make it another speech occasion because otherwise it destroys the whole purpose of having the written replies . |
14 | While frank HM opener ‘ Swivelhead ’ tears the teeth out your gaping mouth , ‘ Candy Deceit ’ slows the whole thing down to ‘ Drowners ’ speed , daring confetti to rain down on us as if to finalise the effect . |
15 | As the next few paragraphs are going to get quite biochemical , and I see no easy way round them , Figure 10.3 summarizes the whole sequence for anyone who really ca n't bear the details ( you can then skip to page 258 ) . |
16 | Alan Strachan as director knits the whole show together neatly and Jonathan Cohen on piano is a suitably reticent accompanist . |
17 | ‘ He thinks the whole world revolves around his flipping programme . ’ |
18 | The external schema is the subset of the database which is relevant to the particular user , and though it may be a summarised and a very restricted subset , the user may think that it represents the whole view , because it is the whole view as far as the user is concerned . |
19 | The Siemens display goes the whole hog . |
20 | When the miller unleashes this stallion to plunge straight off after the wild mares in the fen ( 4057 – 66 ) he unwittingly unleashes the whole course of events that will lead to the " swyvinges " in his family 's bedchamber that night . |
21 | But that is a highly vulnerable position for any politician to take - and I doubt if it offers the whole answer . |
22 | This subdivides the whole field of science and technology into about 60 000 subdivisions . |
23 | In any event , your Lordships ' decision in this case , re-establishing as it does the decision in Reg. v. Lawrence [ 1972 ] A.C. 626 , renders the whole question of consent by the company irrelevant . |
24 | The third turning starts in the resulting gap in mid-field and turns the whole field towards the centre , and so on . |
25 | Then the sky lights up with a devil lightning prong that turns the whole countryside into a photo negative . |
26 | 13:33 ) which causes the whole mixture to rise , or like salt rubbed into the meat to preserve and flavour it ( Luke 14:34 ) . |
27 | To do so means having kept back something special in reserve and therein lies the whole problem with ‘ Great Expectations ’ — Tasmin threw out her finest first . |
28 | We need the winds everywhere and we rely on people in Florida state to take these very sparse observations and turn them into a map which covers the whole surface of the tropical Pacific . |
29 | We will have to wait for the Donaldson report , which covers the whole country . ’ |
30 | The deal covers the whole UK mainland , and was greeted in the City as an important breakthrough . |