Example sentences of "many of [art] cases " in BNC.

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1 Ritual observances continue awkwardly as in the clumsy Hakagawa-like genuflexion , ‘ A saggy bending of the knees ’ , but the original sense of the ritual , as in so many of the cases described by Harrison and Frazer , seems lost .
2 Miss Christine Murphy , a spokeswoman for the Public Health Laboratory Service - a Government-funded but independent organisation which also monitors levels of illness — said : ‘ This year 's virus is a sub-type of a strain we have seen before and many of the cases are not severe .
3 Miss Christine Murphy , a spokeswoman for the Public Health Laboratory Service - a Government-funded but independent organisation which also monitors levels of illness — said : ‘ This year 's virus is a sub-type of a strain we have seen before and many of the cases are not severe .
4 Many of the cases involve compassionate assistance , of the kind which may be necessary and justifiable if the right to self-determination is to have any meaning for those who are weak or bedridden ( e.g. responding to a request to bring pills ) , but not all are like this .
5 Many of the cases falling within this offence may involve serious fault — where there is racing on the highway , for example , or a prolonged course of very bad driving , or bad driving in order to avoid apprehension .
6 Fifteen years ago , many of the cases SAVE was involved with caused ridicule amongst our critics .
7 Many of the cases included in the two reports are now on the road to recovery .
8 Indeed , it is difficult to justify many of the cases where tapping is strongly suspected on the ground that it was necessary for the detection of really serious crime or to deal with major subversion , even allowing for the very wide definition of subversion announced by Lord Harris of Greenwich in 1975 when he said that
9 As in many of the cases of environmental change discussed in this text , social or historical factors underlie many of these changes .
10 Many of the cases are responsa , in which the jurist is answering a legal enquiry .
11 This seems to strike at the very heart of many of the cases which are made against firms of accountants .
12 This explained why LGS was not used by mothers to treat many of the cases of loose stool presented by children , since the mothers ' diagnosis was of one other than daeria .
13 Many of the cases appear to turn upon a consideration of whether the payment was voluntary or involuntary .
14 There was no duress in a sense of an actual or threatened interference with the person or property of Woolwich as occurred in many of the cases ( though I am of the view that the notion of duress or coercion should not be narrowly confined ) .
15 In many of the cases arising out of homelessness , local authorities have sought to interpret their statutory obligations narrowly .
16 First , a great many of the cases in this area of the law are concerned with industrial strife of one kind or another and where this is so the common law has been excluded or modified since 1906 by statutory immunities granted to persons acting in a ‘ trade dispute . ’
17 Many of the cases , such as Seager v Copydex ( 1967 ) 1 WLR 923 , concerned actual or threatened breaches by ex-employees in relation to information given to them by their former employers , and where they wanted to exploit it to their own benefit .
18 Many of the cases which have from time to time been relied on in support of the High Trees doctrine are clearly examples of only the first principle .
19 We are already in a position to give reasons for many of the cases of uneven distribution , where an adjective is grammatical in one of the two positions but not in the other , beyond simply making some such observation as " the following adjectives are unacceptable in predicative position " .
20 Many of the cases of torsades de pointes reported during procainamide therapy may be due to the actions of its active metabolite , N-acetylprocainamide , which often accumulates in patients with renal disease .
21 In many of the cases brought against experts , where full arbitral status did not seem appropriate , the expert 's immunity was said to derive from the fact that the expert 's status was that of a " quasi-arbitrator " , or that the expert was " in the position of an arbitrator " , or that an expert was " in the nature of an arbitrator " .
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