Example sentences of "of the [adj] times " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He used the columns of the Irish Times to inform Roman catholic consciences of permitted interpretations of state divorce on the grounds of religious liberty , interpretations which were diametrically opposed to that of the Irish bishops .
2 The appearance of the results of the Irish Times opinion poll on the same day predicting the failure of the proposal may well have affected the turn-out .
3 Ed Moloney of the Irish Times wrote : ‘ … a large number of those attracted to and recruited into the party through Robinson 's efforts were different in a number of important respects from the traditional Paisley follower of the early rabble-rousing days … . ’
4 Fergus Pyle of the Irish Times was at the station when the expected delegation from Liverpool arrived on the morning train .
5 As sporting intros go , it ranked with the effort by the correspondent of the Irish Times at the Montreal Olympics of 1976 .
6 HERE JACKIE HAYDEN TALKS TO TWO OF THE JUDGES FOR THE PHOTOGRAPHY COMPETITION , DERMOT O'SHEA , ART EDITOR OF THE IRISH TIMES AND COLM HENRY , IRELAND 'S LEADING ROCK PHOTOGRAPHER WHOSE CLIENTS INCLUDE U2 AND HOT PRESS , ABOUT THE COMPETITION IN PARTICULAR AND PHOTOGRAPHY IN GENERAL
7 It 's something Dermot O'Shea is pleased to see — as Art Editor of The Irish Times he 's always felt that , just as a newspaper gives prominence to its top story , so also its best images should be treated with equal respect .
8 Unlike many other professions or hobbies , photographers do not have much access to courses where they can hone their skills , although you will occasionally see ads on the back of the Irish Times .
9 ‘ For me Dave Mackay was more of a thoroughbred of the early times — but I think he could have played successfully in today 's football .
10 ‘ Have you heard of the Penal Times ?
11 There was a neutrophil leukocytosis with appreciable derangement of the clotting times .
12 How the ravers were to find their way out of Chalk Farm and into their bedsits would also be a challenge worthy of the do-it-yourself times into which the metropolitans were moving .
13 Barbara Coleman would detest the solitude , the place would bring back memories of the good times and she would be confronted more than ever with the evidence that the good times had gone .
14 And with the kiss came a sudden rush of memories ; not of the arguments , the long silences , the hurtful remarks , but of the good times they had had together .
15 Radcliffe 's description of the period 1788 – 1803 for Lancashire cotton weavers mingles experience and myth but conveys something of the style of the good times : " Their dwellings and small gardens clean and neat — all the family well clad — the men each with a watch in his pocket , and the women dressed to their own fancy — the church crowded to excess every Sunday — every house well furnished . "
16 The lexicon and the clustering allusions in the second half of the poem confer upon it a gravity , a sadness not wholly predictable from the opening , which seems to herald a piece on the theme of gathering rosebuds , drinking wine , and making the best of the good times before the infernal walls close in .
17 The fact remains , however , that there was a certain defensive quality in many Nonconformist discussions on their new buildings ; the Editor of the Baptist Times insisted in 1902 that ‘ today , under changed conditions , we are false to no principle and to no tradition in making our Sanctuaries beautiful as well as useful ’ .
18 ‘ The myths of Gallifrey tell of the Dark Times .
19 People spoke of the great times when he fought sea-battles all over the Sudreyar and further south , in England and Ireland and Wales , but he , Paul , had not been there and did n't remember them .
20 I had a long chat with during the trip when , amongst other topics , we recalled the days of the agricultural show season and some of the hectic times we had , especially at the Norfolk and Suffolk shows .
21 But this may have been more than just a sartorial sign of the changing times .
22 Bracken House , the former home of the Financial Times , became the first candidate and English Heritage then submitted some 70 recommendations to the Department of the Environment ; these included Bankside .
23 Frank Barlow , chief executive of the Financial Times , was appointed Pearson 's new managing director .
24 In its business coverage , it lacks the muck-raking skills of the Wall Street Journal and the international thoroughness of the Financial Times .
25 LABOUR received the unexpected endorsement of the Financial Times today in an editorial which criticised the Conservatives for having ‘ run out of steam ’ after 13 years in power .
26 Oddly enough , I would have thought it was the decision of the Financial Times to support Labour which swung many people behind the Conservatives at the last moment .
27 THE ultimate indignity has befallen Richard Lambert , editor of the Financial Times , following its backing of Labour last week .
28 On a low table in front of her were some engineering trade magazines and a copy of the Financial Times .
29 BRACKEN HOUSE , THE former home of the Financial Times , came under threat at the time ministers were considering the introduction of the Thirty Year Rule on listing ( see page 149 ) , and probably played a major part in securing the greater protection for post-war buildings of excellence that SAVE had sought for so long .
30 They have also attracted their own market in terms of housing , holidays , magazines , insurance and even a whole weekend supplement of the Financial Times ( 6 January 1990 ) .
  Next page