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

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1 So mid October saw many of the councillors and officials at London Zoo .
2 He wondered how many of the bits and pieces had got there ; especially the room full of empty bird cages or the room lined with different coloured pencil sharpenings .
3 Even for a commercial artist , many of the patterns and textures will provide the basis for shading and tonal work or even complete illustrations .
4 They even attacked art — especially ‘ modern art ’ — but while they made fun of the pre-War Cubists , Expressionists and futurists , they borrowed and transformed many of the principles and techniques of these earlier movements . ’
5 Poorly paid employment on Lebanese construction sites — as David Gilmour points out in his Dispossessed — was the fate of many of the farmers and labourers of Palestine .
6 He pointed out to the magistrates that the people of the parish had previously been law-abiding , that riotous demonstrations and the destruction of property were rare , and even now were believed by many of the farmers and traders ( and the poor themselves ) to have been the work of gypsies .
7 In his most recent work , L'Acacia ( 1989 ) , Simon again approaches , from another angle , many of the locations and themes of his previous novels .
8 Many of the experiments and creations of the Yorkists and the first two Tudors had been pushed aside , leaving the old system of Exchequer finance in command .
9 A third is that many of the buy-outs and recapitalisations succeeded because the managers knew something the shareholders did not about future cash flows .
10 " The world little knows " , wrote Faraday , " how many of the thoughts and theories which have passed through the mind of a scientific investigator have been crushed in silence and secrecy ; that in the most successful instances not a tenth of the suggestions , the hopes , the wishes , the preliminary conclusions have been realized . "
11 McLuhan was enormously popular and apparently influential only a few years ago , since when it has been commonplace to pick out many of the absurdities and contradictions of his thought .
12 He also had repaired many of the roads and bridges that were damaged in the great flood of I 803 and built a bridge at Câmara de Lobos , improved the municipal theatre and presented six beds and a hundred blankets to the hospital .
13 This , as should by now be clear , is a crucial distinction in this argument , for it underpins ( along with the public/private distinction utilised by Wolfenden ) many of the conflicts and disagreements over morality and the ‘ proper ’ role of the criminal law during this post-war period .
14 As they grow into adult life they find that many of the conflicts and confusions of childhood are unresolved .
15 Many of the arteries and veins of the circulation system run through the muscles of the body .
16 As we shall see , many of the controversies and conflicts which permeate contemporary rural life either stem from this fundamental change in the social composition of most villages or are exacerbated by it ; but it is also important to remember that this transformation has been provoked by preceding changes in the economic and social organization of agriculture .
17 At the root of many of the dilemmas and contradictions is that while mothers gain a great deal materially from these benefits , they run the risk , at an ideological level , of merely con-firming the link between being a woman and necessarily , therefore , becoming a mother .
18 The Spanish State has subcontracted to the Foundation many of the rights and obligations under the loan agreement .
19 Mr Anderson also took a great deal of interest in the local church and contributed towards many of the improvements and alterations undertaken during the late 19th and early 20th centuries .
20 Interviews with the head , senior staff , teacher-librarians and members of the library committee disclose a large measure of agreement that the use made of the library by many of the departments and courses has increased substantially in the period covered by the project .
21 At the present time it is being compounded of course by the er effects of nineteen ninety three Education Act with all that that Act implies or tightening up er many of the processes and procedures that we follow in dealing with special educational needs , we have a host of new draft documents for consultation from the Department for Education .
22 Many of the colleges and institutes of higher education have established broad-based curricula in the arts , social sciences and to a lesser extent natural sciences .
23 A study of the implications and status of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis , for example , would begin to make explicit many of the assumptions and claims of language teaching .
24 The introduction of automated office systems could carry these processes still further , thus undermining many of the assumptions and procedures which we have conventionally applied to archival work ( Gavrel 1990 : Hedstrom 1991 ) .
25 Though their controller of programmes in Scotland indicated , in an interview he gave The Scotsman earlier this year , that many of the aims and aspirations of the Scottish task force had been incorporated , in his view , in the final version of ‘ Extending Choice ’ , John Birt 's mission statement for the future of the BBC .
26 He had no great domain ; many of the nobles and churchmen — and especially the latter — were richer and more powerful than he .
27 Many of the knobs and levers also display that rather nice handbuilt look .
28 Clearly many of the schemes and proposals outlined there were to find full or partial implementation in the Butler Education Act , the creation of the Welfare State and a National Health Service , the New Town and National Parks Acts , and the nationalisation of basic industries .
29 In spite of widely different histories and circumstances , many of the joys and sorrows of church music all over the world are familiar to us in this country .
30 Fairy lights were hung over many of the mosques and houses .
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