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

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1 It is far from notional to suggest that the activities characteristic of the rivers and playing fields of late nineteenth-century Oxford and Cambridge were load-bearing supports underpinning the moral structure of British and imperial society .
2 Erm but if this trend continues , I can see them shooting down the activities side of this this place and just using it as an advice centre .
3 Gordon Durie stole down the right and seeing the defences lack of organisation , he blasted in a low pass which McCoist drove home first time .
4 Thus the Bengali perceptions of the west in the 19th century — studied from the view-point of contact between dissimilar cultures and the attitudes characteristic of elite groups in a colonial society — has a relevance to the analysis of much wider issues .
5 ‘ Oh but look here , does n't someone show me round — show me the ropes sort of thing ? ’
6 The solicitors firm of Bindman and Partners are representing the Society .
7 In addition the large and perfectly matched pearls outlining the margins of the mitre crown and the balas ruby of 414.3 carats mounted at its apex were enough to proclaim her ready access to the treasures of the orient .
8 Ian is a consultant for a computer company and Paula is in the accounts department of another computer company .
9 Joining Anderson Green in 1949 , he worked in the Inward Freight Department and Hotel Services Accountants of Orient Line before moving to the Accounts Department of Passenger Division following the P&O/Orient Line merger in 1960 .
10 The invoice section from Contracts & purchasing and estimates and cost control from Engineering have been absorbed into the accounts group of the Finance Department at Peel Park .
11 ‘ 'T IS ’ has made the suits kind of antsy about sonnets .
12 For further information about commercial art galleries in Cologne see both the Around the Galleries section of this paper ( p.21 ) and the profiles of eight leading gallery owners in the last issue of the paper ( No. 18 , May 1992 , p.20 ) .
13 Now the futures price of the three-month deposit contract on LIFFE is not quoted as in ( 8.22 ) .
14 WITH a huge ‘ bear squeeze ’ under way , agonised screams could be heard in the vicinity of the futures pits of London yesterday .
15 The scouts were walking to Chester cathedral for an afternoon service as part of the scouts Service of Praise .
16 The press photographers certainly thought so with 30 lenses behind the Lithuanian goal and none remotely near Packie Bonner at the Wanderers end of the ground .
17 Nevertheless , the patterns characteristic of the speakers ' respective social groups emerge quite clearly .
18 And on the estates sort of people , there were different ty types of people but Street would ha ha had a name .
19 But fears remain for the future of dozens of businesses because of the dispute over leasing arrangements with Inntrepreneur , the estates arm of Grand Metropolitan .
20 One of my most memorable experiences at this time was an outing organised by the magazine Studio International in october 1969 in which we toured the artists studios of the East End .
21 This was the artists concoctions of dream landscapes , borrowed myths , symbolic objects and classical figures of kings and fairytales .
22 It hangs , he assures me , in the billiards room of White 's .
23 In the cities lack of employment has led to despair and alcoholism .
24 Thirdly , the Convention may be silent both as to the substance of a particular issue and as to the law by which it is to be determined , in which case it is a question of construction whether the Convention covers the point or merely leaves it to be dealt with under the law applicable under the conflicts rules of the forum .
25 Since a Convention rule covering an issue displaces the need for resort to the conflicts of laws whilst the non-coverage of an issue necessitates recourse to the applicable law as determined by the conflicts rules of the forum , it may become necessary to decide whether an issue on which the Convention contains no express provision is covered by implication , applying any canons of interpretation laid down by the Convention itself , and if not , whether recourse is to be had to general conflict-of-laws rules or to any particular conflict rules laid down by the Convention .
26 In fact the pet petticoat restaurant is is run as a and because the theatre trust for whatever reason could make profit out of the petticoat restaurant and people that actually work there for the trust that actually took it over and the trust actually get 's a percent of the takings percent of profit and er .
27 Now all of this may well have made no difference to the final result ; the courts reading of the facts may have led them to the same conclusion whatever the meanings given to reasonable and unreasonable .
28 The findings of the Harms Commission of Inquiry , which in November 1990 concluded that there was no proof in allegations that the police operated death squads to eliminate prominent government opponents [ see p. 37843 ] , were called into question by a court decision on Jan. 18 .
29 And then the last item on the NOTES pages of Curve 's itinerary comes back to me : ‘ At a few shows , mainly the universities , alcohol is going to be a problem ’ .
30 Abrams ' experience proved that being a solid but unspectacular TV performer is no longer enough in these days where a politician risks instant oblivion unless he can turn in the hustings equivalent of an MTV award winner .
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