Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [adj] in [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They considered the activities available in the centres incompatible with their needs .
2 Above all else the guiding principle is to tease out the meanings inherent in the images ; to ask : " What 's important here ? "
3 It will become home for his earthly shade , and will join those of his predecessors which line the balconies hewn in the death-cliffs .
4 The groups involved in the initiatives are the National Farmers ' Union , Council for the Protection of Rural England , Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group , Royal Society for Nature Conservation-The Wildlife Trusts Partnership and the World Wide Fund for Nature .
5 The combined effect of the two should ensure that cost of forward cover , as reflected by the rates , fluctuates closely around the interest rate differential of the currencies concerned in the Euromarkets .
6 We will continue to work strenuously for a political agreement which is acceptable to all the parties involved in the talks which the Secretary of State has had during the past year with the main constitutional parties in Northern Ireland the Government of the Republic of Ireland .
7 This ‘ hard line strategy ’ reveals yet again the contradictions inherent in the Conservatives ' law and order policy .
8 Second , the contradictions inherent in the demands made on the state were likely to intensify as capitalist development proceeded .
9 The third defendant issued a third party notice against the plaintiffs ' accountant claiming an indemnity or contribution in the event of the third defendant being held liable to the plaintiffs , on the ground that the accountant had negligently failed to warn the plaintiffs of the risks inherent in the defendants ' transactions .
10 Prosecutors claim to have found that all the companies involved in the transactions , including the shipper , were companies owned by Mr McNamara and allege that no vehicles were ever involved in the transactions .
11 Besides , the subsidies implicit in the incentives were insufficient to offset the anti-export bias created by the NEP ‘ padding ’ and protectionism and were aimed at only the largest enterprises .
12 ( At that time the lesbians involved in the organizations of the conferences had all long since made positive decisions to be child-free . )
13 It begins with two entranced dancers fencing with short bamboos , and ends with the dancers unconscious in the arms of the community , while the bamboos continue dancing on their own as if they were slivers of paper on an electrostatically charged diaphragm .
14 It has led to our recognition of the difficulties inherent in the codes which texts employ to articulate what could otherwise not have been written , of the difficult negotiations between ideological expression and the things this expression seeks to characterise and thus control , and of the complexities of a text 's own negotiations with other texts .
15 Jacobitism is not an easy subject to study , because of the problems inherent in the sources .
16 Either we may see them as qualifying the properties inherent in the nouns , or we may take the view that lawfulness and distance serve to mark out certain generally recognized subcategories of heirs and cousins ( whereas one can scarcely argue for any generally accepted subcategories of strangers and kids marked out by totality and mereness ) , so that they can be treated as ordinary ascriptive adjectives .
17 Lovesey 's books have been called by some critics pastiches , though he is firm in stating that he intended to produce the equivalent of the police procedural in the days when there was not much procedure and not all that many police .
18 It was a shrug the shoulders , sink the hands deep in the pockets and be fed up about the running nose cold .
19 It is doubtful , however , that this was one of the criteria uppermost in the minds of the metallurgist during the engine 's inception !
20 premises ‘ over the shop ’ , looking on to the town 's main streets , can provide desirable offices for local professional firms , or indeed flats — residential use in particular keeps the streets alive in the evenings and at weekends when the shops are shut .
21 ( 7 ) The secretary of any club to the premises of which this section applies shall notify the licensing board for the area within which such premises are situated of any reconstruction or extension of , or alteration in , the premises which affects the facilities available in the premises for the provision of the customary main meal at midday , and if the secretary of any club contravenes this subsection he shall be guilty of an offence .
22 ( 7 ) The secretary of any club to the premises of which this section applies shall notify the licensing board for the area within which such premises are situated of any reconstruction or extension of , or alteration In , the premises which affects the facilities available in the premises for the provision of substantial refreshment , and if the secretary of any club contravenes this subsection he shall be guilty of an offence .
  Next page