Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] often [verb] " in BNC.

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1 These places on a water that attract casual anglers and , therefore , receive a lot of bait during the daytime often fish well after nightfall .
2 Others close to the Prince often described his friendship with Camilla as ‘ the biggest love story that never was ’ .
3 I 've never measured how long they stay under water , but tourists walking along the path to the waterfall often report that they think a bird is drowning !
4 This is a phenomenon which most of us experience from time to time , particularly when performing a highly practised task like driving a car or using a keyboard , and which the clinician often feels presents in exaggerated form in certain neurological conditions .
5 The writer often called the tune and imposed his ideas on the art director and visualiser , as a junior art director was then called .
6 The white foamy part of a broken wave is largely made up of air bubbles and the board often digs into it rather than riding over it .
7 Its disadvantages , on the other hand , include ( a ) its partial circularity : theme is whatever comes in initial position and whatever comes in initial position is theme ; and ( b ) its failure to relate descriptions of SVO languages , particularly those with relatively fixed word order such as English , to descriptions of languages with relatively free word order in which , for instance , the verb often occurs in initial position .
8 We therefore take account of the fact that the programmer often wants ( especially in scientific computing ) to do further operations on the result of an operation , and consequently this result can be held in a storage register in the processor , the accumulator .
9 Victoria 's genius in the Tenbrae Responses is to set the text to music of simple strength , built on memorable melodic lines in which the text often receives one note per syllable .
10 It might well fit into the category often referred to as ‘ bootlegging ’ .
11 Hence the excuse often heard from a student ‘ But I am sure that I learnt that in the school ! ’
12 Deposition of the endocuticle often occurs in daily growth-layers ( Neville , 1963 ) .
13 The literature often focuses excessively upon officer-councillor relationships , thereby overlooking the very different roles which councillors themselves adopt .
14 The experience often leads to depression and serious illness ; indeed many people die shortly after retiring .
15 As we have seen , the difficulty often lies not in obtaining tokens of a variable , but in obtaining the full range of realizations associated with it .
16 erm Undoubtedly the university often won , but that did n't stop the city keeping on trying .
17 The building often revealed the man .
18 The user often replies with a question about what the computer is capable of doing , and so on until common ground begins to be established .
19 Henry took the route often taken by historians faced with a tricky historical problem .
20 Again , the west often prefers to offer so-called ‘ know-how ’ , rather than money .
21 Very commonly two or more men shared a single assessment , mostly members of the same family , though the occasional bracketing of different surnames suggests cousins or , rather , in-laws — the husbands of co-heiresses who were commonplace among landowners locally ; and maybe business partnerships of the kind often formed by miners to save expenses .
22 What is used is a run-down clock generator of the kind often found in electronic dice games .
23 It was this kind of evidence that led us to use the social network model in a systematic way : as Ballymacarrett is the most stable and well-established of the communities , we can conclude that the social conditions there are favourable to the emergence of a close-knit network structure of the kind often found in low-status communities ( Young and Wilmott , 1962 ) , and there is ample ethnographic evidence that a close-knit structure of this kind is capable of imposing normative consensus on its members .
24 When a glider recovers so easily , a rapid movement forward on the stick often results in a very steep recovery and a high speed dive .
25 Support for the Association 's work continues to come forward and the Association is increasingly benefiting from working with other organisations on mutually beneficial projects with the Association often achieving both publicity and financial assistance .
26 The urban poor tried valiantly to give to their dead a dignity they had scarcely known in life ; but the attempt often proved unavailing .
27 The overall impression resulting from these findings is that emergency services specifically designed for potential attempters might be of benefit to some , but the impulsive nature of the act , and the fact that the attempt often appears to be carried out with a particular purpose not related to help-seeking , but aimed at someone in close proximity , reduces the chances of preventing suicide attempts by this method alone .
28 School leavers , or inexperienced people joining the industry often get jobs in riding schools or competition yards where they gain practical experience .
29 And there seems no doubt that this intense life of the mind often reached a point either of aching or of languor .
30 Since the condition often occurs in the secondary-school years , the young person may not only be faced with the trauma of the diagnosis and the confusion of being still able to see clearly in some situations and not at all in others , but there may also have to be a decision to transfer the medium of communication from print to braille , all this taking place in the years leading up to important examinations .
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