Example sentences of "of [art] [noun] [pers pn] [vb -s] [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | Note 2.6.9 We now see one advantage of placing the function symbol to the right of the element it operates on , namely that the combined effect of f followed by g is naturally denoted by |
2 | And it come , at the end of the day it comes out with all the ones it 's matched , the duration it 's been there and er makes it a damned sight easier basically . |
3 | ‘ At the end of the day it comes down to individual decisions about individual jobs , ’ says Fairweather . |
4 | Some of the things she comes out with I could tell you . |
5 | Most of the women he goes off with when we have a bad row are certainly not the type which would make me jealous — which , of course , is the main purpose of the exercise ! |
6 | It also disappoints him that much of the music he works on is funded from abroad then exported . |
7 | Stone is anxious to stress that women did not want divorce , which is largely true of the period he concentrates on , although the picture becomes much more complicated in the twentieth century . |
8 | One of the innovatory features of the Act is that the holder of the office it sets up — the Data Protection Registrar — has the task of applying a set of principles — the Data Protection Principles , set out as a Schedule to the Act . |
9 | Art and science are about how man makes sense of the world he lives in . |
10 | ‘ more down to earth , more devoted to our purposes than those of the author , less concerned with artistic values than with a faithful rendering of the subject 's experience and interpretation of the world he lives in . |
11 | With his great experience of Scotland and his wide reading , Hamish is able to bring together many disciplines for a detailed and interlinked account of the districts he passes through . |
12 | Some of the shots he pulls off are fantastic . |
13 | He 's turned his cab into a mobile picture gallery , and has even been known to dash off the odd sketch of the people he drives around . |
14 | Criticism of the phenomenological approach to RE was given in Chapter 4 , particularly on the grounds that in practice it tends to lose touch with much of the religion it sets out to understand and include . |
15 | A kestrel is even smaller than a barn owl — it may only weigh six to seven ounces , and could easily lose a quarter of an ounce overnight in cold weather because of the energy it uses up trying to maintain its body heat . |
16 | Each words in the lattice is then given a syntactic rating based on the probabilities of the transitions it participates in . |
17 | Jane is a disgruntled , mean and worldly woman who presents herself as the victim of the men she sets out to attract and soon sees through and rejects . |
18 | In a tenth of a second it passes on only six digits of code to other neurones yet the brain works seemingly simultaneously . |
19 | No she 's er she 's so she 's so keen at not letting go of a discussion she comes back , she 's like a terrier ! |
20 | In the course of a year it meets on about half as many days as the House of Commons and never on more than three days in a week . |
21 | And it it goes away and then all of a sudden it comes back , and it 's re it 's really torturing me . |
22 | at the side of him , it 's eeeerrrr , hand on hooter and all of a sudden he goes back over again , he , he just did n't even know I were there , no signal , no nothing . |
23 | Yes , it 's not like he 's going , he 's , he 's going faster than this geezer , he 's not , he 's getting a drag from him , then all of a sudden he comes out and he goes faster you think , explain a little bit more on the old . |