Example sentences of "[is] [verb] of [pos pn] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ He 's heard of your father 's heart attack , and wants reassurance — personal reassurance — that I will be the next chairman of the international network , which of course includes all dealings in Auckland . ’
2 Its mellow character is compounded of its age , its comfortable lack of pretension and the various roles it has to play as farm , design studio and home . ’
3 Before the first century B.C. little is heard of its quality .
4 But more is heard of his colleagues , Stephen Langton and Robert of Courson .
5 An account is given of their development up to 1988 .
6 If the vendor is disposing of his entire business , he should deregister for VAT purposes otherwise he will continue to receive and be required to file VAT returns .
7 Chapter 2 has outlined the relevant tax provisions to be considered when the husband is disposing of his share or interest in the matrimonial home .
8 A WOMAN who went to a Turkish base camp is to talk of her experiences to a Darlington audience next week .
9 Also , contempt proceedings under the rule require the consent of the Attorney-General , unless the court is acting of its own motion .
10 ‘ It is said of her grandmother that the only members of the cabinet who were not her lovers were those who had reason to believe they were her father , ’ Society Wag , Darling
11 A comparison is made of their version and the CRC signatures are also compared ( except for Foreign files ) .
12 A great deal is made of its ease of use .
13 He was probably also employed by Balliol College in the 1470s , when mention is made of his wife Agnes and son John Orchard .
14 As Smith points out , my PhD — and incidentally , my maturity — is regarded as a threat , while much is made of my ‘ limited clinical experience . ’
15 As he 's said of his ill-fated time at Virgin Records , ‘ I had to keep telling people they 're not going to make me into the next Sting . ’
16 The tips of the pencils are ‘ cognitively salient ’ , and what is seen of their relation determines the child 's communicated beliefs about length .
17 That is a disaster not only for them but for the nation , which is robbed of their abilities .
18 The inherent danger of conceiving of art in purely personal terms is that the commonality of experience is robbed of its political value .
19 No it 's not three X divided by five , it 's says of their cost .
20 Quality of mind , response to children and understanding of young people 's needs is what is needed of our primary school teachers .
21 The ballad-type songs of the day sung by such as Tony Bennett , Rosemary Clooney , Doris Day , Debbie Reynolds and Frank Sinatra , plus the great classical music she had heard from her youth , facilitated Masha Cohen 's overcoming of her personal nightmares , and had become — along with the very important Yiddish music — the natural background to Leonard 's life , too .
22 If it is to give of its best , however , it must be appreciated and affirmed by being allowed to perform on its own , in addition to leading the singing of the whole congregation .
23 Perry is rid of his pursuer , fresh again .
24 That our instinctive loathing for the way Dr. Briant is manipulating human life , is using a human child as a lever to open the box that holds God 's secrets about life , our response , I say , is not reactionary , not the stupid fears of little men , but is born of our awareness of the dangers of knowing too much , is a God-given warning , if you like .
25 As Rolle uses his Meditations on the Passion as a means to recognise what is meant by the death of Christ , in terms of the life within ( " it is tokenyng of my deth , and fylthe of my synne , slayn hath my sowle …
26 However , our relationship with God is comprised of our own personal devotional life , both prayer and Bible meditation , our willingness to live life in an attitude of communion with God and certainly in obedience to him and his priorities .
27 We know that Wilson married , for his wife Mary helped him and continued the business for a time after his death , but nothing is known of her origins or ultimate fate .
28 Little is known of her education ; however , she was certainly precocious .
29 Little that is definite is known of her early years , except that she was said to have been a backward child ; that she was sent to a private school , Hope House , in Taunton ; that she broke away from the family tradition of Methodism and became an Anglican ; and that she came to the attention of Dorothea Beale [ q.v. ] , and taught at Cheltenham Ladies ' College from 1877 until 1881 .
30 Nothing is known of its origins but it is engraved ‘ Reading 1892 ’ .
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