Example sentences of "with [art] [noun pl] ' [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 In 1828 he began five years as an apprentice apothecary with the Apothecaries ' Company of London .
2 She failed to see , Mrs Stead-Carter finally declared , why it was that Miss Poraway , who had never been a mother , should concern herself with the Mothers ' Union in the first place .
3 Hugh Thomas , the technical delegate , stressed that the changes have been made because of the conditions and with the horses ' safety in mind .
4 The crisis revealed , however , that the king 's war no longer had the wholehearted support of the community , and more ominously , that some members of the nobility were prepared to associate themselves with the commons ' demands for concessions and reforms .
5 The interacting transparent planes used by the Cubists to achieve this fusion and to explain and develop form , coincided with the Futurists ' conception of the transparency of objects , and proved capable of adaptation to give a sense of dynamic balance or movement .
6 First , that the conditions I have described constituted a substantial interference with the residents ' enjoyment of their property up to June 1990 ; second , that enough residents were affected to constitute a public nuisance if it were not for his other defences .
7 Jaggard 's first book was registered with the Stationers ' Company on 4 March 1595 ; he rapidly became a successful businessman .
8 Current assets , such as debtors , stocks and cash , amount to £33,000 , which is fairly paltry in comparison with the creditors ' figure of £400,000 , three quarters of which is due within one year .
9 They are also concerned with the parents ' attitude to the school and the teachers , their ideas about the causes of educational achievement , and their contacts with the school .
10 There may well be problems ahead both for the pupil and for the school if the child 's family are not in agreement with the professionals ' decisions about the educational placement proposed .
11 In fact , the tensions between the Church Commissioners and General Synod have as much to do with the Commissioners ' function as mediators between Church and State .
12 Fear of being ousted from Edward 's entourage by the king 's Poitevin half-brothers perhaps gave him a personal interest in the political upheaval of 1258 , which began with the half-brothers ' expulsion from England .
13 The great ancient enamelled screen emblazoned with the Fists ' defence of the Imperial Palace against armoured Rebel Titans had been moved aside , to reveal the Reclusiam itself .
14 Fortunately it coincided with the miners ' strike of 1984 .
15 But we do say that its object [ has ] been gained , and that after all the stir and excitement , the inconvenience … we are back where we wished to be , and with the miners ' case under negotiation .
16 Thus , although the legal model may prevent directors from regarding third party interests as ends in their own right , it is arguable that it is consistent with the directors ' obligations to the shareholders for the company to sacrifice profits in order to protect them given these possible relationships with shareholder utility .
17 In addition the place of operation of subsidiaries must be given and the particulars of associated companies together with the directors ' interests in the companies ' shares .
18 It also contrasted with the tenants ' associations in that it was not directly representative of those whose cause it espoused .
19 As it faces the power of capital organized in interlocking but legally separate corporate entities , labour is now cut up into atomized units of which the boundaries are by law coterminous with the employers ' definitions of employment units in both private and public sectors .
20 During the 1950s pressure for road improvements mounted ; the British Roads Federation , which represented road construction interests , joined forces with professional lobbies , motor manufacturers and traders , while the TUC aligned with the employers ' associations for more spending .
21 The legal advisers to the managers should agree with the investors ' lawyers at an early stage exactly what is required to satisfy the conditions .
22 To analyse problems of world food resources , the geographer must integrate his knowledge of physical systems with the ecologists ' knowledge of ecosystem dynamics .
23 For purely practical purposes , I deal with the artists ' money for recording and touring expenses .
24 A subsequent search and investigation of her papers , such as they were , revealed a very large cargo of brandy in the hold , damning correspondence with the ships ' agent in Belgium , and some unconvincing reasons for her change of destination from Sweden to Spain .
25 Holly did not interfere with the baron's ' running of the hut .
26 Caterers may come into contact with the Magistrates ' Court in this way if they commit one of a number of offences relating to their profession , for example licensing offences , or offences under the Food Safety Act 1990 , or possibly offences under the Trade Descriptions Act 1968 .
27 The room was a waist-high maze of rich wood panelling , staggered over several levels with the magistrates ' bench at the highest .
28 ‘ I agree with the Childminders ' Association on that .
29 Our engineer friends had collected crusty rolls from the dining room and , after a few drinks themselves , had set out to experiment with the sea-gulls ' capacity for whiskey .
30 The effectiveness of metaphors of the type in which inanimates are treated as animate is shown in passages of narratorial description where they are deployed in a fully developed form , for example in a lengthy passage where the pre-Copernican view of the universe ( which still pervades the English language ) is exploited and combined with the peoples ' perception of animacy in all things : " The moon rose slowly and almost vertically into a sky where there was nothing but a few spilled traces of cloud .
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