Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] years of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This will be particularly true in the final years of school and in the initial preparation of an individual transition plan .
2 Essentially , occupational pension schemes are designed — by men with male ‘ family wage-earners ’ and male middle-class career patterns in mind , so not only do they exclude the majority of part-time workers , but they tend to assume that earnings peak in the final years of working life , which is much less often the case for women than for men .
3 There was a great intensification of the partisan use of the festive calendar in the final years of Anne 's reign .
4 The issue in this appeal is whether profits accruing to the taxpayer company , HK-TVB International Ltd. in the four years of assessment 1980–81 to 1983–84 arose in or derived from Hong Kong .
5 Professional Studies in the early years of schooling is a course which extends throughout the first three years of the degree .
6 In the early years of schooling , for example , children 's activities in the play area frequently include shopping .
7 From Waddo 's point of view the king 's death was a disaster ; too far from court to be involved in safeguarding Chilperic 's heir , which was arranged by Fredegund , he was liable to be excluded from the ruling group in the early years of Chlothar II .
8 EUROTUNNEL confirmed yesterday that Channel tunnel revenues are not forecast to rise in the early years of operation to offset the £2.2bn rise in the cost of the project to £7bn .
9 Cynewulf 's annexation of land bordering on the Thames in Berkshire in the early years of Offa 's reign certainly appears to have been followed up by further action in the original Gewissian territory around Dorchester .
10 As Bell points out , because of the composition of his sample , these illustrations all concern flows of money from parents to children at a point in the life course when characteristically resources are stretched , namely in the early years of child-rearing .
11 Whilst there may be a particular need for parental support in the early years of child-rearing there are plenty of examples of significant assistance being given in other circumstances .
12 It will be the argument of this chapter that a two-party system did exist under William and Anne , although there was a temporary blurring and realignment in the early years of William 's reign .
13 This transformation started in the early years of William 's reign , and was largely complete by 1696 .
14 Much the same impulse had been felt in the early years of reports by the APU .
15 Thus sharing accommodation with relatives in the early years of marriage still is the experience of a sizeable minority of the population , especially for those who marry young .
16 To anticipate that discussion , the available evidence suggests that elderly people , just like people in the early years of marriage , have always shared a home with relatives for instrumental reasons of a financial kind rather than by personal preference ( Wall , 1984 ) .
17 A consequence of these differences in the early years of marriage and childbearing is that fertility levels are much higher among those who live in the local authority rather than the owner-occupied sector — and fertility differentials by housing tenure are much greater than other conventionally used socio-economic variables such as social class , female employment , education , or income ( see figure 7.5 ) .
18 There was a dramatic flowering of public discussion and debate ; whereas under Nicholas I on average no more than eight new journals were founded annually , that number leaped to thirty-three in the early years of Alexander II 's reign .
19 Whatever can a person like Mary Ann , born in the early years of Victoria 's reign , have thought of England in the 1930s ?
20 Characteristically , they ranged in size from about 1,000 to 4,000 people in the early years of Victoria 's reign , but the ones that were administrative , legal or ecclesiastical centres as well as market towns were sometimes larger than that .
21 Despite the primacy of its influence , socialisation in the early years of life is not confined to the family , however .
22 It is therefore particularly valuable for the self-employed person who , in the early years of trading , would find it the ideal vehicle for minimising costs or raising working capital at a low rate of interest .
23 ‘ When I read the Medau News , ‘ she says , ‘ I am completely overwhelmed with admiration at the way my Medau colleagues have created a Medau world in this country — far beyond any pipe dreams Molly and I could have had in the early years of struggle .
24 This does little to enhance the status of the woman teacher and nothing towards meeting an important educational need of young people — that of relating to both men and women in the early years of childhood .
25 In the early years of school children can contribute to an ‘ I can do ’ booklet which records such milestones as naming shapes , tying shoelaces , writing name and address unaided , counting to twenty and many other significant causes for celebration .
26 There are moments of natural awakening to one 's own beauty , but it is rare that it is really appreciated in the early years of womanhood ; usually it is taken for granted , and only lamented when it is gone .
27 For the majority in all occupational groups , earnings are roughly similar in the early years of employment , that is , between the ages of 20 and 25 .
28 Since the fraction of faults that are unfamiliar , ie the novelty rate , is high , especially in the early years of repair , the rate at which the knowledge base is changing is also high .
29 None the less , sales promotion was , in the early years of shortages , pursued in a restrained way .
30 The appointment of a Benedictine abbot as chief adviser to the king was sufficiently unusual to call to mind Benedict of Aniane 's position in the early years of Louis the Pious 's reign .
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