Example sentences of "[that] [art] [noun] 's " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A warm bed and an alarm clock for company often work since it is said that the clock 's ticking sounds like mother 's heartbeat .
2 It is commonly thought , but wrongly so , that the buyer 's best legal rights exist against the manufacturer .
3 The buyer was going to re-sell the goods and it was recognised that the buyer 's sub-purchaser would test the weight and thus ascertain the precise sum to be paid to the seller .
4 not provide that the buyer 's duty to account to the seller for the proceeds of sub-sales is limited to the buyer 's outstanding indebtedness to the seller .
5 A seller will prefer that the buyer 's only remedy in respect of defective goods should be the express one granted under the contract .
6 He suggested that there was an invisible substance on the moon , filling the craters and covering the mountains in such a way that the moon 's shape was perfectly spherical .
7 So that the moon 's long fingers , broken
8 I started getting confused halfway through , but I was determined not to ask anyone else I did n't want another negative response to spoil the childlike happiness that the policeman 's courtesy had brought to my otherwise unrewarding day .
9 ‘ So I 'm arrested , then ? ’ asked Jimmy at last , shaking his handcuffed wrist so that the policeman 's hand also jerked upwards .
10 What very few people seem to know , however , is that the Edsel 's failure was the foundation for much of the company 's later success .
11 They believed implicitly in the effectiveness of their method of preparing and getting the bone , and they were certain that the bone 's power stemmed as much from the special treatment it had during the ceremony as from the actual jailing or drawing substances with which they afterwards impregnated it .
12 At Procedure Roll a defender may , very occasionally , succeed in persuading a Court that the pursuer 's case is so hopeless that it is not worth allowing evidence to be heard because even if that evidence was heard , it would not make out a case which would entitle the pursuer to succeed .
13 In the event that the pursuer 's case is overly coy , the Court may require one or other party to give further specification of their case .
14 It might be thought that the subject 's apprehension of his own brain is more immediate and more holistic than any external knowledge , however complete , and that this explains the experiential difference between the two kinds of knowledge .
15 The object must be such that the subject 's senses are acute enough to pick it out .
16 The sociologist who gathers a life-history takes steps to ensure that it covers everything we want to know , that no important fact or event is slighted , that what purports to be factual squares with other available evidence and that the subject 's interpretations are honestly given . ’
17 Lacan argues that , firstly , the human infant is born pre-mature , neurologically deficient and lacking in motor sensory coordination and , secondly , that the subject 's experience of itself is not auto-generated but derived from others .
18 The Committee ordered that the member 's Practising Certificate be withdrawn with effect from 1 February 1993 .
19 In these days of financial sweeteners , surely there are more votes in rescuing 18,000 , mainly elderly , investors from dire financial plight just as there is ensuring that the UK 's last home-grown car manufacturer remains in British hands ?
20 It is suggested that the UK 's existing LFA is assessed in order to define at least 3 zones of natural handicap within it , viz : —
21 Of course we will be interested in seeing any products that the UK 's undisputed Father of the Custom Guitar brings to our attention .
22 INFORMATION : THE STRATEGIC ESSENTIAL Surveys suggest that the UK 's senior executives do n't get the information they need .
23 Jane Cooper argues that the UK 's retention of the death penalty hinders Amnesty 's fight for abolition worldwide
24 Although he realises there is still a long way to go , he does believe that the UK 's second year results indicate a sustainable turnaround , adding that last year 's performance was very close to budget .
25 Does the worsening trade balance in manufactured goods over the ‘ long boom ’ and through the point where the UK imports more manufactured goods than it exports mean that the UK 's export industries have failed ?
26 When we turn to trade in services it is no surprise to find that the UK 's net income from financial services has grown dramatically as the City 's banking and financial business has grown .
27 A utilitarian deterrence theorist ought to conclude from this that the UK 's penal system is an immoral one .
28 In addition to being the party representing the interests of wealthier people , Mrs Thatcher 's Conservative governments of the 1980s argued that the UK 's competitive position was so difficult that the interests of production had to come firmly before redistribution .
29 Here he calls for unified action from education and industry to ensure that the UK 's future professionals are not left in the cold .
30 By 1992 the Treasury could safely claim that the UK 's top rate of income tax at 40% was below that of its major competitors , as can be seen from Fig. 16.6 .
  Next page