Example sentences of "[conj] [art] generations " in BNC.

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1 Or , as Niall Fitzduff put it , the community ‘ is not to be destroyed at the whim of mining company ’ while nothing could ‘ compensate us or the generations to come for the loss of our community ’ .
2 If the birth-rate is rising , we can discover whether this is due to women bearing more children or having them younger , so that the generations succeed one another more rapidly .
3 Thus increasingly in the twentieth century children have been born when both their parents and grandparents were younger , further reinforcing the likelihood that the generations will overlap in adult life ( see Anderson , 1985 , for an elaboration of these patterns ) .
4 Charles Darwin 's work forced his generation and the generations since to restructure the conventional ways in which they thought about humanity 's role in the world .
5 Not just for our members in the coal industry and their communities , not just for our members in the coal-fired power stations , not just for all of the rest of our membership whose industries depend on a secure supply of cheap energy , but for our children and the generations to come after us , whose very prosperity will depend heavily on our success in that campaign .
6 If we allow multi-media to remain so shapeless and subjective , how can we ever hope to understand its implications for the information industry and the generations of information users who may ( or may not ) benefit from it ?
7 When the generations overlap , and when the insect is gregarious ( cockroach ) or social ( termite ) , the juveniles are often infected and infection passes freely between juveniles and adults .
8 It seems to follow from Darwin 's ideas that as the generations pass , so the organisms in a particular line of descent ( lineage ) must become better and better adapted to the prevailing conditions .
9 The anthropologists saw the rural smallholder as the bearer of tradition and wedded to the same way of life as the generations before him .
10 But as the generations ran their course , each one interbreeding with the local village dogs , the successive progeny became smaller and relentlessly unimpressive .
11 As the generations go by , under the assumption of blending inheritance , variation is bound to become swamped .
12 It manifestly is n't true that variation disappears as the generations go by .
13 The nonrandom survival and reproductive success of individuals within the species effectively ‘ writes ’ improved instructions for survival into the collective genetic memory of the species as the generations go by .
14 Evolutionary change in a species largely consists of changes in how many copies there are of each of the various possible contents at each addressed DNA location , as the generations pass .
15 It is repeatedly being copied and recopied as the generations go by , like the Hebrew scriptures which were ritually copied by scribes every 80 years to forestall their wearing-out .
16 Therefore , in the population , this form of the gene will become more numerous as the generations go by .
17 We have seen that a very important part of a gene 's environment is the other genes that it is likely to meet in successive bodies as the generations go by .
18 Gazelles , no less than cheetahs , are subject to cumulative selection , and they too will tend , as the generations go by , to improve their ability to run fast , to react swiftly , to become invisible by blending into the long grass .
19 In my hypothetical discussion of cheetahs and gazelles I said that cheetahs , unlike the weather , had a tendency as the generations go by to become ‘ better hunters ’ , to become more severe enemies , better equipped to kill gazelles .
20 There has been an arms race in which forest trees became larger as the generations went by .
21 This means that , as the generations go by , the total amount of genetic difference from the original ancestor can become very large , cumulatively , one small step at a time .
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