Example sentences of "[is] [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If that s the kind of performance we can expect from well paid professionals god help us .
2 Of more interest from the point of view of the Muftilik than the date of Molla Husrev 's departure for Bursa-except in so far as the two are related , of course-is the date of his return , since it was then , if the account is correct , that he became Mufti .
3 He has actually come out this season and said that there s no place in the side for Strachan and Rocastle .
4 What Im saying is with the midfield and full backs we have there s no need to be under much pressure .
5 ‘ There s no substitute for skill ’ — wise words mate .
6 He s no good with the back pass and/or crosses .
7 Leeds did play Grampus 8 preseason … maybe there s a chance of a return match ? ?
8 But unless there s a change of plan , by the summer of next year the base will effectively be deserted .
9 That s a candidate for Danny Baker 's After All ( serving suggestion ) .
10 Also , there s a clause in the sale which means Leeds paying Brighton 100grand if he should ever get an England cap … nothing about an Irish cap : - ) ) )
11 On teletext there s a quote from Wilko re : Rocastle 's statement .
12 I do nt mind personal criticism of players … but I just think there s a limit to how far we should go .
13 I do nt think there s a place for 2 midfielders on the bench .
14 Dere is nu luv fe de old , nu luv fe de sick
15 If there are two or more defendants , the home court is the court for the first defendant 's address .
16 This is the court to which any and every politician hoping to influence the California legislature must come and pay his respects .
17 The court to which such an application is made is the court to which the debtor would present his own petition unless the demand was served by a Government department , the debt is the subject of a judgment and the demand indicated an intention to present a bankruptcy petition in the High Court , in which case the application is made to the High Court .
18 The most important case , drawing together several decisions in the lower courts , is the Court of Appeal decision R. v. Samuel .
19 There is the Court of Human Rights which adjudicates on the basis of the European Convention of Human Rights , of which the United Kingdom is , of course , a signatory .
20 This is the Court of Chancery : which has its decaying houses and its blighted lands in every shire ; which has its worn-out lunatic in every madhouse , and its dead in every churchyard ; which has its ruined suitor , with his slipshod heels and threadbare dress , borrowing and begging through the round of every man 's acquaintance ; which gives to monied might , the means abundantly of wearying out the right ; which so exhausts finances , patience , courage , hope : so overthrows the brain and breaks the heart ; that there is not an honourable man among its practitioners who would not give — who does not often give — the warning , " Suffer any wrong that can be done you , rather than come here " .
21 3.19 As already stated , the tribunal best qualified to set the guidelines for judges trying personal injury actions is the Court of Appeal .
22 my lord various er matters arise under that , we would ask er at this stage erm not for a judgement , two reasons , but for an adjournment , the first reason is the court of protection costs will have to be calculated
23 The court with the power to strike out is the court before which the proceedings have been brought , rather than the one to which transfer is being considered .
24 The court to which an application for a stay of action should be made is the court in which that action is pending and the court can either stay the action or allow it to continue on such terms as it thinks fit ( s 285(2) ) .
25 He wo n't keep have to be going off to court to find out what is the law at that moment of time .
26 You wo n't keep have to be going off to court to find out what is the law at that moment of time .
27 But the focus of this volume is the law of marriage and divorce , which Professor Stone feels has been sorely neglected by historians of the family .
28 One of them is the law of return ; another is diversification — as against any kind of monoculture ; another is decentralisation , so that some use can be found for even quite inferior resources which it would never be rational to transport over long distances .
29 Money is the law of life there , which has to be lived by .
30 The Bible is the law of God , which encourages us to obey God and to live for him .
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