Example sentences of "for the [noun] of [art] time " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The market opportunities for a flexible hybrid car like the LA301 are likely to be much greater than a battery only vehicle , but in practice such a hybrid car will be driven in zero emission mode for the majority of the time .
2 And Goldberg in the margin : for the whole of the time I knew him he had , stuck on his studio wall , a reproduction of Picasso 's amazing 1943 painting of the mother teaching her child to walk .
3 It will just be left blank for the whole of the time .
4 It very rarely happens that you take several fish in one period and then nothing for the remainder of the time you spend on the water .
5 Related to this is the issue of the double workload women have to cope with if they work outside the home — paid work by day and unpaid work for the remainder of the time .
6 However , school children pay only about two-thirds of the adult fare and for only 200 days of the year , and for the remainder of the time adult passengers may not be numerous enough to cover operating costs .
7 For the rest of the time , we talked only of natural history and local gossip , and got on very well .
8 For the rest of the time it is a mass of dead stems which can remain standing for up to two years , a sight distasteful to town-dwellers who , thanks to the energies of gardeners and the preference of landscape architects for evergreens , are not accustomed to seeing decay .
9 For the rest of the time — the quieter moments in its life — it must render itself inconspicuous .
10 There were no school sports and no athletics , just football , and that is what I played for the rest of the time I was there .
11 For the rest of the time , they spoke only of business .
12 For the rest of the time they live in a group , or as individuals , depending on the species .
13 For the rest of the time , he and his steed must return to the churchyard where his mortal remains lie .
14 For the rest of the time they were there money did not exactly overshadow them but the pressing need for it was always there , it was always in their minds .
15 For the rest of the time they were concerned with broader matters ( Robinson 1977 , Vol .
16 The business was able to carry on but the flat he sometimes used was uninhabitable ; he came up to London only on Tuesday nights and " camped out " for the fire-watching while for the rest of the time he commuted between London and Surrey .
17 I see arts students ' timetables , an English student comes in for two hours a week , and he 's home for the rest of the time .
18 For part of the day it is pounded by water and for the rest of the time it is exposed to the desiccating heat of the sun or the bitter cold of night .
19 For the rest of the time the parties are basically loose amalgamations of autonomous state parties .
20 for the rest of the time .
21 . Where we have a client who has a need for the first ten years for it looks like a hundred and ninety thousand pounds worth of life cover , at the end of the ten year period , the need is reduced , maybe the children have left home , so sum assu , assured reduces down to , in this case , it looks like to be about fifty thousand for the rest of the time .
22 For the rest of the time , to move from one shelter to another — a distance of about twenty yards — ; required considerable courage .
23 I wo n't see you again for the rest of the time
24 he probably do n't need to watch the telly for the rest of the time
25 At least in what other poorer women were telling me , when it came to after work and weekends the men were quite the women were prepared to look after the children and felt it was their role to look after the children while the man was at work ; when the man came back he continued to feel that the woman should look after the children erm for the rest of the time , and the idea of a shared child care arrangement did not operate in at least a number of the families that I talked to and had been one of the causes of the breakdown of the marriage and one of the precipitating factors in the man physically abusing the woman .
26 Apart from two periods apart from the beginning of the fifteenth century , and I think in certain respects in our own day , and for the rest of the time we were dass land ohne muziek the land without music , I fear .
27 At its crudest the conservative-historical approach to permissiveness is but a mourning for a lost ‘ golden age ’ , an expression of grief for the passing of a time when questions of morals supposedly appeared much simpler , more straightforward and certainly less contentious and open to question .
28 Why these particular prints stand out in my opinion from so many produced for the tourists of the time , is because the artist has not just reproduced his drawings on to plates but he has been able to produce marks that are alive and work within the context of the print .
  Next page