Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [verb] in [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 That is , if the same grammatical tag is found more than once in a position it is necessary only to know that the tag occurs in that position and the best scores associated with that tag .
2 It will be appreciated that much of the discussion and some of the judgments made in this note turn on an uncertainty in English law , i.e. the extent of the Gallagher jurisdiction .
3 And so I took the opportunity to describe in some detail conditions in the attic .
4 The Joint Venture and other gas producers in this area have the opportunity to participate in each package of contracts .
5 ‘ I am delighted to have the opportunity to participate in this type of training . ’
6 MORE THAN two million Britons living abroad have not taken the opportunity to vote in this election .
7 Unlike the Labour party , my party was at least prepared to table an amendment to the motion , so I welcome the opportunity to speak in this debate .
8 A week 's leave in August 1958 gave me the opportunity to share in another aspect of island life .
9 The present churches are right to be concerned that many do not give themselves the opportunity to grow in any faith because apathy and false gods have moved into the vacuum that exists instead of a soul .
10 The Gesta describes in some detail the journey of Peter to Rome to receive the belt , the symbol of the Christian warrior , and the diadem or crown , the symbol of kingship .
11 The terminology adopted in this chapter , ‘ people with learning difficulties ’ , is a reflection of an increasing readiness to attend to the views of the people themselves .
12 The terminology used in this statement will be appropriate for those reporting entities which are companies .
13 In the terminology used in this book task analysis is the correct description of this activity .
14 The terminology used in this Review ( e.g. ‘ cost centres ’ , ‘ output-led measures ’ ) suggests that there is a danger that research within UK universities might be weighted towards producing results which will satisfy accountants or statisticians , rather than scientific curiosity or national R & D needs .
15 As small headphones are dreadfully inefficient at the bottom end , there is a built-in bass boost which helps the guitar sound in this situation — switch eight lets you turn this off when not working with headphones .
16 Top marks , too , to Globe for particularly interesting and scholarly programme notes , first by Clemens Romijn , on the music and then by Joop Klinkhamer on the harpsichords used in this recording ; the innovative touch is that Klinkhamer is the builder responsible for the reconstructions played here by Jacques Ogg .
17 No purely internal linguistic explanation can account for the fact that the change happened in this way in some dialects and in different ways in others .
18 Got to learn where the knobs go in this place .
19 The last time the clubs met in this competition West Hartlepool won 22-6 but that was six years ago .
20 At each of the Clubs featured in this brochure an HCI Representative will be on hand with regular visiting hours .
21 The accounts provided in this chapter of the development officers ' work will have shown already the breadth of activities in which they were involved : assessing , visiting and supporting clients and their families ; recruiting , training and supervising support workers ; negotiating with other service-providers .
22 As a result of the discussions described in this section , the information model may well change in content .
23 The technique explained in this chapter , resistant line fitting , produces a line which makes the absolute value of the deviations in the Y direction as small as possible ( rule 3 ) .
24 One strength of the technique used in this study is that it can be applied retrospectively to material produced for other purposes .
25 It is less resistant than the technique shown in this chapter .
26 A Western consultancy attempting to track down the money lost in this way said that much of it was being deposited in foreign banks .
27 The cities lost in this process .
28 So far , the case discussed in this book for the extended use of the industrial co-operative as a form of organisation for production or provision has stood primarily upon the proposition that it is an expression of authentic industrial democracy , that such an extension would help to fill a debilitating gap in the practice in the United Kingdom of western liberal principles , to mend what Bertrand Russell calls ‘ this disruption of democracy from within' .
29 The views constructed in this way are often ambiguous and require interpretation by a skilled operator .
30 While there may be much to be said for the views expressed in this passage it seems to me with all respect to Wilson J. that she was stating what she thought the law ought to be rather than what it is .
  Next page