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

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1 None of the old historians of this County take notice of this Chantry , not even Mr Lambarde , who lived some years in the Bishops ' Palace here .
2 These results could be related to the histological findings , the dynamic nature of H pylori infection , the types of the antigens tested , NSAID intake , or some weaknesses in the manufacturers ' instructions .
3 In this way , Axis governments anticipated a Pacific war that had been studied by only a few individuals in the Allies ' interest .
4 The therapist realized that some changes in the couples ' situation would have to occur within a few days if another crisis were to be avoided .
5 During the afternoon , while he sat idly chatting to a few men in the masons ' lean-to , James Menzies arrived , his brown horse soaked black .
6 Returning to Queen 's , he asked for , and got , a few gigs in the students ' union — ‘ my very first one was as support act to Blackthorn ’ — and soon he was working once or twice a week round the local pubs and folk clubs .
7 Under the Solicitors Accounts ( Deposit Interest ) Rules 1987 , solicitors have a duty to account to their clients for the interest earned by the placing of such monies in a solicitors ' client account .
8 But behind such flurries in the economists ' dovecote lies the question of whether the new economics stands the test of evidence .
9 To date the analysis of this has focused mainly on the roles played by these units in the MNEs ' approach to global strategy , and the administrative procedures adopted to use them effectively .
10 Following such treatment , there was a significant change in the numbers of these organisms in the patients ' bowels and this change could last for many weeks or months , during which time the patient continued to improve .
11 These evils in the Webbs ' view ‘ completely undermined the old principles of government inherited from time immemorial and embodied in local custom , the Common Law and the Tudor and Stuart legislation ’ ( Webb and Webb 1963:91 ) .
12 Papa Curel , who had plagued their lives by playing the trumpet at all hours in the artists ' villa , retained their luggage but allowed the party to take their paintings with them .
13 No doubt there 'll be many reminiscences in the Officers ' Mess , but some parts of its history may never be told .
14 The percentages of variants in Sue 's speech provide a reasonably reliable index of the socioeconomic status and educational background of her interlocutors , just as the percentages of those forms in the clients ' own speech are able to do .
15 The lights , which once seemed to be there to compensate for any lackings in the performers ' abilities , are now secondary to the punch of the music .
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