Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [conj] the new [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But neither the old nor the new law provides tenure for the two lower academic grades .
2 Neither the old nor the new analogy is logically derived ; the former is rooted in habit , the latter emerges by a flash of insight .
3 True , they lacked the pipe-smoking liberal American politics of Fancher and Wolf thirteen years before , but they had , briefly , the market , caught on the cusp between the old and the new wave of 1968 , and they had the listings .
4 On the one hand these groups , which in some respects mark the bridge between the old and the new philanthropy , were the first to focus their attention directly on urban working-class ( and in some instances lower-middle-class ) youth , rather than on children and adolescents , or women and girls .
5 When the change of form becomes too great for the old and the new form to interbreed successfully , one is entitled to say that a new species has been generated .
6 Barbarism , similarly , is divided into three substages but in this case the stages are not seen as universal , since according to Engels , they differed in the old and the new world .
7 On this occasion the information is shown on both the old and the new basis . )
8 In 1988 the old effective exchange rate had absolute values in the 70s but the new index is in the 90s .
9 After short periods as general manager and chief engineer of the Mutual and the New Telephone Companies he set up in practice in 1893 as a consulting telephone and telegraph engineer , in which capacity he acted as consulting engineer to the telephone departments of Guernsey ( 1896–1921 ) and Glasgow ( 1900–4 ) , as well as Portsmouth , Hull , Brighton , and Swansea ( 1900–11 ) .
10 and then you do a division of the one into the other and you get a figure that is smaller in the tabloids and larger in broadsheets like The Times and The Financial Times and in periodicals like the Communist and the New Statesman .
11 Japanese economic competition was feared , although the anxiety was based more on memories of competition in the 1930s than the new competition that developed so vigorously in the 1960s .
12 As I have remarked , Culler 's Structuralist Poetics encouraged some readers to think in terms of rapprochement between the New and the Newer Criticism .
13 If the new if the new settlement proves successful , it will have an impetus all its own and therefore it will not come to a full stop in two thousand and six .
14 An English critic who attempted the task of keeping a balance between his political convictions and his aesthetic responses was John Berger , who wrote in the 1950s for the New Statesman .
  Next page