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

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 The primary schools ' experiments of the 1960s with the initial teaching alphabet ( ITA ) proved this .
32 Managing quality in this example is based on the assumption that long-term and medium-term planning of all subjects is important , that the analysis and modification of the use of time have to be repeated from year to year ( if not from term to term ) and that targets and statements of attainment should feature in schools ' schemes of work " and provide a valuable focus for the planning and transaction of classwork by individual teachers " ( HMI 1990:14 ) .
33 The pupils tested were identified in relation to the schools ' rating of their achievement .
34 Heads were asked to rate coordinators ' impact on their schools ' pursuit of the four PNP aims .
35 We in the North owe him a considerable debt for the enthusiasm and perception he has shown in building up the schools ' collection of works of art now owned by the County Council .
36 Regulationists ' view of a coherent national economy with international links is , in my opinion , consistent with the 1830s/1840s crossroads .
37 The escapers ' sense of urgency was intensified by Tuesday 's decision by East Germany to end visa-free travel to Czechoslovakia .
38 This is well illustrated by the oral history of the Gilbert Islanders ' discovery of South America in the distant past .
39 In the coal-miners ' strike of 1984–5 , It was clear that one of the social structures that reinforced the militancy of many strikers was the community within which each mine was located .
40 Indeed , when Tolkien arrived , he found that the Old English being dished up to the likes of Betjeman was in a grossly truncated form , and the poetry was mainly seen as a quarry for ‘ gobbets ’ — that is , short passages of a very few lines , used for the purposes of testing the candidates ' knowledge of sound-changes .
41 The centre assures the supply and availability of the resources necessary to support and assess candidates ' achievement of the award 's outcomes to the required performance criteria and in the appropriate range of settings .
42 Be sensible and try to see things from your pets ' point of view :
43 For instance , both of our prevalence surveys found strong correlations between townships ' rates of known opioid use and levels of social deprivation , particularly unemployment .
44 The Chief Executive also shall report on clients ' views of the service provided , drawing on an independent annual national survey and results of local office monitoring of customer service .
45 It uses movement and drama to develop the clients ' sense of self and to broaden their interests .
46 A second report on the same research study gives further information about clients ' use of the fund .
47 clients ' understanding of risk warn the Client of the extent to which he may be exposed to risk
48 Social workers have an important role in raising clients ' consciousness of the structural sources of their difficulties so that they can achieve greater influence and control over their lives .
49 The problem for Scotland 's lawyers seems to be that they are now exceeding their clients ' expectations of the legal services , Neil Fitzgerald explains .
50 Is this true from the clients ' point of view ?
51 No laboratory job was forthcoming , but a place was offered as a general helper in the electricians ' section of the College 's Engineers ' Department .
52 Pundits ' predictions of repossessions topping 80,000 during 1991 hit the headlines .
53 However , it does appear that the notion of language teachers joining a profession with its own history does not figure largely in tutors ' conceptions of their work , that English tutors do not see ‘ language ’ as something requiring separate attention , and that all tutors tend to play down aspects of language policy or language in society .
54 But I think if we 'd made ‘ Rumours ’ then ‘ Mirage ’ then ‘ Tango ’ and then ‘ Tusk ’ it probably would have made more sense from the listeners ' point of view .
55 Few people have actually done experiments on listeners ' perception of attitudes through intonation .
56 THE EVANGELISTS ' USE OF THE STORY
57 It took us all day to get the months ' accumulation of gooey duck muck and seagull poo off the airframe , and despite getting soaked lying in cold puddles of grimy water under the floats we never did remove all the khaki slime from their bottoms .
58 It also means that the real value of the redemption payment will vary according to the rate of inflation during the last eight months ' life of a bond and so calculations of real yields to redemption can only be made on the basis of assumed rates of inflation .
59 On the advice of M Broussonet MD FRS , perpetual secretary of the Royal Society of Agriculture in Paris , he took the momentous step of obtaining six months ' leave of absence to visit England .
60 When he fell ill in 1857 he was granted £30 to enable him to get away for the winter , and six months ' leave of absence shortly afterwards .
  Previous page   Next page