Example sentences of "a [noun] [to-vb] in [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Services at the Horton General Hospital in Banbury have been saved by a decision to invest in a new maternity unit . |
2 | Following a survey for the Widdicombe Committee , Professor Miller concluded that ‘ very few respondents declared a willingness to vote in a local election for the major party they opposed nationally ’ ( Widdicombe 1986 , III : 106 ) . |
3 | Undertaking an obligation to obey the law is an appropriate means of expressing identification with society , because it is a form of supporting social institutions , because it conveys a willingness to share in the common ways established in that society as expressed by its institutions , and because it expresses confidence in the reasonableness and good judgment of the government through one 's willingness to take it on trust , as it were , that the law is just and that it should be complied with . |
4 | This has not been done in the interests of achieving a restrictively formalist , text-immanent reading of the story , nor is it suggested that contextual detail does not have a part to play in a multidimensional , interpretative process . |
5 | Economic conditions , nationally and locally , the size and location of the firm , and the availability of finance will all have a part to play in the final decision . |
6 | This bothers the commission 's president , Jacques Delors , who thinks the Community has a part to play in the Middle East . |
7 | This is problematic for a group which has no longer a part to play in the productive sector . |
8 | In consequence , there was always a scramble to spend in the last half of the financial year when the danger of an underspend was becoming apparent . |
9 | She had a horse to ride in the last . |
10 | This is considered to be the minimum needed to allow a GIS to function in a mixed data environment . |
11 | His was too literary , and now too deliberate , a talent to flourish in the public realm of the theatre . |
12 | It is always a pleasure to speak in the same debate as the hon. Member for Beaconsfield ( Mr. Smith ) . |
13 | ‘ It was a pleasure to play in the same side as a true football genius . |
14 | He would not have created around him such a large and adoring circle had he not had very real capacities as a teacher , a gift for friendship and for infecting others with his passion for art , literature , films and music as well as a readiness to share in the post-war desire for a better world . |
15 | A local garage owner has leant them a car to help in the short term . |
16 | The student is expected to acquire knowledge and has also to prove a capacity for wide reading and understanding , an up-to-date awareness of the state of both debate and development in educational ideas , a capacity to criticize in a constructive way and an overall capacity to link those skills with collecting and analysing data and with the planning of projects . |
17 | However , if an individual lamp will help a child to succeed in an integrated setting , every effort should be made to provide one . |
18 | ACTRESS Helen Mirren is facing a battle to star in a big-screen version of TV 's award-winning thriller Prime Suspect . |
19 | This may sound a silly question , since this book assumes that its readers are looking for a place to live in the British Isles , but it is more sensible than it sounds . |
20 | The grant of a right to park in a defined area takes effect as a legal easement ( Newman v Jones ( 1982 ) unreported ; London and Blenheim Estates v Ladbroke Retail Parks [ 1992 ] 1 WLR 1278 ) . |
21 | In addition , the tenant should be granted a right to park in a delineated area , subject to the availability of space from time to time . |
22 | Yet this is the firm basis from which the choreographers built their framework of steps , poses and gestures before painting in the personal touches which describe each performer as an individual with a right to speak in a particular way . |
23 | On the one hand he must cope with routines where the demand is for precise obedience to established instructions and on the other hand he might suddenly be faced with a need to respond in a creative manner totally outside any instructions . |
24 | The overall increase in referral rates may seem disappointing to those who hoped that fundholding would provide a mechanism for reducing the demand for specialist care , but it was probably unrealistic to expect a shift to occur in the first year of the scheme . |
25 | The Alton office , based in Paper Mill Lane , have seen a marked increase over the past six months in the number of adults looking to change careers , either as a result of job loss , reduction in promotion prospects , or a desire to retrain in a different field . |
26 | The original intention was to allow a husband to retire in a similar standard of living to that which he enjoyed while working and to allow his surviving widow to be comfortable after his death . |
27 | To study individual motivation means studying those forces that move a person to behave in a particular way . |
28 | 2.1 Individual motivation To study individual motivation means studying the forces that move a person to behave in a particular way . |
29 | English law does not recognise the continental doctrine of rebellion which requires a person to acquiesce in the unlawful use of official force against him , seeking such civil remedies as may be available subsequently . |
30 | The qualifications necessary to enable a person to stand in a local electionaire more extensive in some instances and more restrictive in others than those which enable a person to vote . |