Example sentences of "of [art] [det] [noun pl] of [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Certainly we do not need to try to go into the whole causal history of an event in order to specify something — one of the many sets of things — that had the property of making the occurrence of the event necessary .
2 We have n't set the world alight , but we have seen a selection of the many kinds of birds and animals which choose to make Shetland their home .
3 A few of the many examples of results obtained with such equipment are Figs. 11.2 , 12.9 , 21.7 and 21.19 .
4 These are just some of the many examples of journalists facing danger and oppression that are documented in the Review , which is published annually by the International Press Institute .
5 Feeble illumination came from phosphorescent lichens mottling the ceiling and from the furnaces of the many tribes of recyclers whose smelting activities and whose upward export-trade in reusable elements to higher zones of the city alone prevented their home-space from filling as full as a constipated bowel .
6 The reason for this will become clear when the fossil faunas are examined , for post-depositional breakage of the upper and lower jaws often removes any evidence of the jaws themselves so that only the teeth are left to provide an indication of the former numbers of jaws , and this index attempts to take this into account .
7 examine with reference to their general compliance with these conditions , the several drawings bearing the numbers given in the enclosed list ; and to prepare a statement , giving first the Conditions which they assume to be required in the cases of each of the three classes of designs and secondly , showing whether any and which of the several sets of drawings selected fail to comply with such conditions ; and also in what respect , and to what extent , these conditions are neglected or departed from .
8 He merely maintained that the non-recurrence of the same complexes of qualities was a probability , not a certainty .
9 Much of the same sorts of observations as apply to Marx 's and Engels 's notion concerning labour also apply to their discussions of property .
10 Likewise , unlike the Labour party , my party and its predecessor have had no difficulty with the proposition that if we create a Scottish Parliament with the kind of effective deveolution which the Bill proposes , the case for the retention of the same numbers of Members of Parliament who presently come from Scotland to Westminster would be weakened .
11 Despite his wide range of achievements , Dall 's name is little known outside of a few groups of specialists .
  Next page