Example sentences of "when [art] " in BNC.

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31 ‘ Could you tell us , President , ’ Trevor Newsom asked the question , ‘ how you would describe your feelings when the marioc vote went against you ? ’
32 So although the ERP had to persist for several hundred milliseconds before the subject felt anything , they nevertheless reported that the sensation had occurred at the moment when the ERP was beginning .
33 The framework for the investigation of ‘ sensory coding ’ was established in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries , when the business of explaining perception was transformed into the more specific project of correlating the physical properties of perceived objects and events with patterns of activity in the nervous system and the latter with the subjective properties of the experience :
34 Not by plane , we 'll catch the train and then the ferry like before , almost nostalgically since when the tunnel is open , there 'll be no more frontiers to cross : the sea , I think again , has already ceased to exist for England .
35 We continue drinking , gazing out at a sea now almost as redundant as five o'clock tea or straw boaters , both commonplace back in the 1950s when the children in Lord of the Flies became violent in the midst of their paradisical island , at precisely this magical hour of five o'clock , and in the living room , that sweetly British interior , flowering the semi-darkness into a plethora of chair covers and curtains , sprigged bone china and mums in Liberty-print dresses …
36 The first portion of lists this complete register — all 2557 lathes manufactured between 1795 and 1928 , when the last one was sold .
37 Hugh chides us for selling at what he regards as low prices , but he forgets that our hobby not our source of income ; it is a way of relaxing during evenings and weekends when the serious business of earning a living is over .
38 This gives the pine a more even rate of absorption so that a more uniform colour results when the stain is applied .
39 An informant is not required to register a death which is the subject of a coroner 's inquest , but the coroner 's officer may inform the relatives when the coroner has issued his inquest certificate to the registrar so that the relatives can obtain any death certificates from the registrar .
40 It is likely that the funeral will be at times when the cemeteries or crematoria are not busy , such as early in the morning .
41 If you are on income support and aged 60 or over you will automatically receive £6 for any consecutive period of seven days when the average temperature is 0 degrees celsius or below .
42 Virtually everywhere from the Highlands to London 's suburbs , main line and local , passenger trains were steadily busier , the total number carried exceeding that of pre-Beeching days when the system was much larger .
43 The first example of equipment redeployment came in 1982 when the then director ( Cyril Bleasdale ) , faced with a serious downturn on Great Western sub-sector services out of Paddington , decided to move ten HSTs to the Midland main line so that a badly needed improvement could be implemented on this potentially profitable and much neglected route .
44 In 1984 , when the InterCity Charter Unit was first set up , it had at its disposal some twenty sets of Mk 1 stock — principally second-class tourist open vehicles — but nothing which could credibly be described as suitable for the VIP trains it was seeking to introduce .
45 There was suitable razzamatazz at Waterloo on 10 June when the blue/white/red/grey livery was shown to the press on two Class 455 units and a Class 50 Howe hauling a short rake of Mark 2 coaches .
46 The Hastings £20m scheme was celebrated by a successful ‘ Gala Day ’ on 27 April when unlimited travel over the line for only £1 was available and more formally on 6 May when the Queen Mother ( Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports ) travelled over the line in the Royal Train .
47 Southern Region general manager Gordon Pettitt took a calculated gamble when he authorised a charity high-speed run to Weymouth on 14 April , when the special train completed the 142½ mile trip to Weymouth in seconds within two hours with a maximum speed of 109mph .
48 Certainly , only eight years ago , when the other sectors were given clearly defined briefs , the lumping of unprofitable passenger services into a somewhat negatively titled ‘ Other Provincial Services ’ produced a kind of dustbin sector .
49 90 per cent availability is now the norm , and there have been weeks when the 150/ 2 series , arguably the most reliable diesel trains ever to have run in Britain , have attained 100 per cent availability during the daytime .
50 Among the first private trolley operators on BR were Rightline Caterers of Rhyl , seen here working 17.40 chester–Rhyl service on a very cold 25 February 1986 , when the well–known instant coffee , common to both private and public sectors , was extremely welcome .
51 On the positive side , a milestone was reached in 1984 when the old vacuum-braked wagonload network was finally abandoned and all worthwhile traffic transferred to the air-braked Speedlink system .
52 A major closure took place on 27 November 1982 when the GN&GE Joint line closed between March and Spalding , together with the avoiding lines at Sleaford and Lincoln .
53 Another historical line saw its last BR train on 26 September 1983 when the Cornish Wenford Bridge line was officially closed , its latter role being entirely devoted to the china clay traffic .
54 We gave our regards to Broad Street on 27 June 1986 when the last train pulled out , the site required for redevelopment .
55 First , BR curtailed the production line of the obsolete overcomplicated Class 56 Co-Cos in 1984 when the 135th example emerged from BREL Crewe .
56 It was increasingly polished during the reign of Louis XIV when the first professional dancers took over from the courtiers after the founding of the Académie Royale de Danse within the Académie Royale de Musique ( 1672 ) .
57 It is first heard and seen when the dancing-master gives the Ugly Sisters a lesson .
58 Another important instance of courtly behaviour is when the hero has to lead the heroine into the dance .
59 Their dance is very different from the work of petipa , whose suggestion of demi-caractère is seen when the Songbird and Bluebird dance in The Sleeping Beauty , where the fluttering of the hands is meant to indicate that birds fly and sing .
60 This particularly subtle quiver of the leg to express newly aroused emotion was first noticed in Ashton 's The Two Pigeons when the Young Girl and her friends pretend to strut around like pigeons .
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