Example sentences of "bring out the [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 How leather can bring out the dark side of your soul .
2 At the same time , it can also bring out the complex ways in which such forms of power also produce their own forms of resistance ; as critics like Stephen Greenblatt demonstrate , these are not separable processes but are simultaneous effects of power .
3 While such studies as these do bring out the peculiar status of the causatives make and have ( which , I would agree , do involve a closer bond between the causative event and the event caused ) , they are nevertheless based on abstract semantic categories which have been set up a priori in logico-truth-conditional terms — Wierzbicka ( 1988 : 237 ) aptly characterizes them as " ready-made labels " — and therefore lose sight of the fact that each individual language is a system where meaning is bonded to form in permanent and idiosyncratic fashion ( cf. the comments on Ransom 1986 in the Introduction ) .
4 If he had the slightest suspicion of how she really felt , it could well bring out the sympathetic side of his nature .
5 Materials should bring out the social significance of knowledge about language .
6 Teaching should also bring out the structural characteristics of different types of verse and poetry , eg nursery rhymes , concrete poetry , haiku , limericks , ballads , sonnets etc .
7 Both Blumler , examining coverage by 31 BBC and ITV regional stations , and Hetherington bring out the extensive nature of these programmes , although performance has varied considerably between the regions , with stations in Scotland , Wales and the North appearing to pay more attention to Parliament than stations in the South or the Midlands .
8 Many people also complain that our present hierarchies bring out the nastier aspects of human behavior , like greed , insensitivity , careerism and self-importance .
9 b ) Bring out the seven prongs of the tool and take the last seven stitches three stitches in ; return the three empty needles to NMP , ( as in K4 , K2 tog three times ) and knit six rows .
10 Most mammals use their sense of smell to find food , and all rely on smell to supplement their taste buds and bring out the full flavour of food , as anyone with a heavy cold will know .
11 Kids bring out the natural father in me and I get a crinkly mouth every time I look at an ankle snapper .
12 Gregg Toland was the cameraman and his work is in a class of its own — full of haunting close-ups and long shots that graphically bring out the tragic relationship between man and the land .
13 Hence they throw into relief and bring out the significant aspects of the phenomenon in question .
14 Finally , Bajazeth offers us perhaps the most complete view of Tamburlaine because these two men are in some ways very similar , and so bring out the true side of Tamburlaine 's character .
15 Van Praagh became a close friend of the Cranko family , Herbert and Phyllis as well as John ; she proved a valuable ally , not only for her position within the company but also because she had a flair for bringing out the best qualities of young dancers and choreographers , and guiding them in their careers .
16 From Thursday onwards , the influence of Venus will be bringing out the artistic side of you .
17 This placed obstacles in the way of their meeting with any regularity , causing Davis resentment and bringing out the ugly side of his nature .
18 ’ He sounded quite excited and Folly found herself smiling at the way his dramatic gesture was bringing out the little boy in someone as sophisticated as Luke .
19 Once the tune comes fairly accurately , the teacher can concentrate on meaning , bringing out the basic elements of the situation .
20 Here the impression is that the object of make is given no choice but to perform the action expressed by the infinitive : in ( 147 ) the speaker even uses make to decline any personal responsibility for what he did — he was " acting under coercion " , a paraphrase bringing out the concurrent nature of the causation involved in these sentences .
21 Studio conditions seemed particularly to bring out these traits , and the need to repeat 78rpm sides certainly brought out the nervous sides of artists .
22 In February , the Bibliothèque des Arts will publish L'âge d'or espagnol by David Boone and , in April , a Dictionnaire des peintres de l'Ecole de Paris , having recently brought out the fifth volume of the catalogue raisonné of Theodore Gericault , complete with a critical study and documentary material and edited by Germain Bazin .
23 There was something about the woman which brought out the official streak in Wycliffe and with it the pompous , well-rounded phrases : ‘ I 'm afraid that we shall have to look into your brother 's affairs and into his relationships both inside and outside the family .
24 Bodley 's view about the literary insignificance of English drama was formally challenged by Ben Jonson who published plays in the Folio edition of his Workes in 1616 and later , and in response to Jonson 's success , by Shakespeare 's first editors , Heminge and Condell , who brought out the First Folio of Shakespeare 's plays in 1623 ( eight years after Shakespeare died ) .
25 Her figure-hugging topaz velvet suit brought out the tawny lights in her brown eyes .
26 At a recent NRA seminar for interested parties , speakers from the NRA brought out the key points of the plan and explained to delegates what the scheme is all about ( Chem .
27 The author has felt that these latter efforts have not in some way brought out the real flavour of the game in the sense that the play does not take place on a real pitch , surrounded by players who get in the way of run-making and occasionally do their stuff by bowling the batsman out or sending him back to the pavilion by some other means .
28 This was the room where only last week they had eagerly discussed the merits of anchovy ( protagonist Auguste ) versus red wine sauce for fillets of John Dory ; whether sole on prawn mousse covered with aspic ( Alice 's invention ) brought out the true flavours of the fish , or smothered them ; whether mussels were preferable simply cooked in white wine or whether , as Emily contended , with cream and sorrel sauce added .
29 His attitude was childlike and brought out the full force of her anger against the vultures waiting beyond the door .
30 These remarks were highly embarrassing for the government and brought out the different opinions within the party on the open-door policy .
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