Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] [noun pl] in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | In the 1970s theorists in the United States of America ( Pincus and Minahan , 1973 ; Goldstein , 1977 ) and in the United Kingdom ( Specht and Vickery , 1979 ) developed a social systems theory drawing on the general systems theory widely used in biological science . |
2 | An increase in the lateral forces in the bulk state will hinder molecular motion and increase T g . |
3 | The remaining 15% or the Auvergne is not designated under the LFA Directive and this is the predominantly arable lowland in the fertile plains in the centre of the Auvergne ( see Figure 9 ) . |
4 | Philip 's father had served in the Irish Guards in the First World War , and was always referred to by his rank . |
5 | Throughout his life Edward had a passion for solitary swimming , often for an hour at a time , in the sea at Felpham in Sussex , in the small lakes in the Black Mountains , or the larger ones in the Lake District . |
6 | It 's especially important for the seven England players because we have to come here in the Five Nations in the New Year . ’ |
7 | At the same time , there was a slowdown in the increase of population in the industrial areas in the north of England , and in industrial Scotland and Wales . |
8 | For example , in the eighteenth century pleuro-pneumonia killed about two-thirds of the country 's cattle , especially in the low-lying lands in the north , and farmers were forced to restock from less devastated regions such as the offshore Friesian Islands . |
9 | Chinnery ( 1991 ) points out that there are far fewer people employed in the caring services in the United Kingdom than the recommended 3 per cent , and that most of them manage to ‘ pass ’ as able-bodied . |
10 | In doing this , the system may have to combine and manipulate information from a number of different sources : the operator specifies the letters and clauses to be used ; the system fills out certain details from the data base ; in some cases it may have to do such things as take the salary and location from the data base , look up the conditions for that location , find out that certain uplifts need to be applied to salary , perform the arithmetic and insert the answers in the appropriate places in the text . |
11 | ‘ I do n't want to sell them , but if an offer came in that was right for the club and right for the player , then we would consider it , just as any club would in the lower divisions in the same position . |
12 | But above all , he would unreservedly acknowledge his profound indebtedness to the three tutors who were instrumental in the successful achievements in the later years of the decade : Douglas-Smith , Edmund Poole and Hampden Jackson . |
13 | Serum gastrin concentration is also known to be raised in patients with H pylori infection , and this is seen in the non-uraemic patients in the present study . |
14 | ‘ And , in the six shows in the run-up to the Cup , we will be dealing with things such as security and personal safety for fans , as well as entertainment and what to do in America . ’ |
15 | Children benefit also from more than usually grammatical speech from adults who address them in the early stages in a fashion tailored to their learning needs . |
16 | Presumably one thought that , in the early days in the universe as it were , the atoms and molecules that existed were very simple ones ? |
17 | The reason is simple : firms often ‘ invest ’ in the early jobs in a new work sector . |
18 | ‘ He is the one who may partner Pinsent in the coxless pairs in the next Olympics . ’ |
19 | Its trunk was almost black ; thick fungus and moss grew in the deep grooves in the bark . |
20 | This reflected Ford 's role in the major shifts in the nature of labour relations in the US automobile industry between 1979 and 1983 , specifically the renegotiation of national wage and work-rule agreements to facilitate increased flexibility of work organization and employee participation in business decision-making ( Katz , 1985 ) . |
21 | The Labour proposals to extend urban boundaries to take in surrounding suburban and rural areas in a pattern of unitary authorities threatened the traditional Labour dominance in the major cities in the non-metropolitan areas . |
22 | This had indeed been one of the aims of the scientific societies of the seventeenth century , such as the Royal Society ; and it was best realized in the superb plates in the Encyclopèdie of Diderot and d'Alembert which show French manufactures in the middle of the eighteenth century , before the industrial revolution changed techniques . |
23 | For that reason I have related some of the more interesting highlights of my life in the Western Isles in the following chapters which can be regarded as an intermission to my Cutter Service . |
24 | In marked contrast very little through passage has been noted in the western Harbours in the spring , counts showing only a rapid departure of wintering birds in March and April . |
25 | There occurred a doctrinal slide in the Presbyterian seminaries in the direction of Arminianism and low views of the inspiration and authority of Scripture . |
26 | There were recurring epidemics of murrain and hoof and mouth disease , a particularly bad series of which decimated herds in the central highlands in the 1860s . |
27 | It also should help determine why there was little organized stealing in the central highlands in the second half of the nineteenth century . |
28 | The relationship between land use and cattle stealing helps explain why the crime was carried out relatively less often in the central highlands in the nineteenth century . |
29 | Integer and real data representations are mixed together in the logical records in the data . |
30 | Oates ( 1985 ) , among others , offers some counter-arguments and finds the empirical evidence lacking both at the international level and in the state-local sectors in the USA . |