Example sentences of "be put on [art] " in BNC.

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1 The United Nations High Commission for Refugees has said Selahattin Osberk , 30 , who is due to be put on a flight to Istanbul today , should be granted refugee status and has a well-founded fear of persecution .
2 They were also told that at 10 o'clock next morning she would be put on a plane back to India .
3 The Galiaras were told that she would be put on a plane at 3.30 pm .
4 You start moving men about from one job to another , and they start complaining , or demanding to be put on a higher grade .
5 Just how much nutrition information should be put on a food label is a much-debated subject and different manufacturers have different views .
6 What does seem important is that discussions on surrogacy , as on other aspects of reproductive biology , should be put on a more rational basis , and that codes of practice should be regulated by professional bodies , and not by the criminal law .
7 Everyone had brought a small handful of husked rice , which they passed to the front to be put on a plate beside the dhāmi .
8 I 'm not encouraging pay-for-play , but I think the players should be put on a retainer by the ARFU to provide their services to the union ’ , their skipper says .
9 As it was too large to be put on a lorry to be moved from site to site it had to travel on roads under its own power and was held to be intended to be used on roads .
10 Despite the inevitable uncertainties and anxieties which such major change might represent , she stressed the need for investment in education and training , and for more effective manpower planning and deployment if health care in the UK was to be put on a stronger and more confident foundation :
11 I would then be put on a plane to Salisbury .
12 These should be put on a properly raised bird table out of reach of vermin which are dangerous disease carriers .
13 I was stunned and very angry that five pence could be put on a child 's life .
14 He says once an order is made the children have to be put on a plane .
15 They would ride , most of them , if they had to be put on a horse while needing the use of crutches to walk or with splints on every bone .
16 David Tweedie , chairman of the ASB , said yesterday : ‘ There is general agreement that the accounting treatment of off-balance sheet financing needs to be put on a footing that is both sound and informative to users of accounts . ’
17 She explained that three times a year 30 people , carefully chosen for their capabilities as team players as well as their business skills , will be put on a ‘ fast track ’ development programme lasting 11 weeks , out of office hours , eating into their weekends and challenging their endurance .
18 Can it be put on a , on a coffee jar ?
19 He is likely to be put on an aircraft in the next few days .
20 The first statue to be put on the bridge was that of St John Nepomuk , by Jan Brokof the Elder in 1683 .
21 By the late 1950s the breed was again in decline and part of the blame could be put on the 1949 Agricultural Act , which set guidelines for bull licensing and required bulls ' dams to have high recorded milk yields .
22 He knew that , ultimately , he had to toe the official line because , like any other player , he could n't afford to be put on the dole . ’
23 Nobody has bothered very much with their theories which have become imaginative curios to be put on the shelf with the books ‘ proving ’ that Queen Elizabeth I was a man , Queen Victoria had a love child , and that Pope John Paul I was murdered .
24 A husband who has a demanding job , and is used to returning home to find dinner ready to be put on the table , may be distinctly put out if his wife is upstairs helping his mother-in-law onto the commode instead .
25 There 's no hope for a breathing space for the business community as far as Mr Humber is concerned : ‘ We will continue to campaign for the registers to include all sources of contamination , ’ he says grimly , ‘ and we will campaign for not just land liable to be contaminated to be included on the register , but then for that to be backed up by actual investigation of those sites and for that to be put on the registers as well . ’
26 It says a lot about the quality of US diplomatic thinking that the Americans were flattered to be put on the same level as the Soviet rulers .
27 Warnings should also be put on the sleeve if any of the exercises are deemed to be risky .
28 ‘ This type of competition is very important ’ she said , ‘ but if the child loses , I would hope that the emphasis would be put on the performance rather than the result .
29 Out of these minute indications , which can only be put on the page as a result of a firmly held original image , comes that necessary close sympathy .
30 Pieces can be put on the board in any order , so one position can arise via several sequences of operators .
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