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

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1 Assessing the response to chemotherapy in oesophageal carcinoma is not easy and is based on data provided by endoscopy , histopathology , and computed tomography .
2 All the evidence available suggests that the rate of fall of the glucose concentration does not affect the response to hypoglycaemia in a clamp .
3 The ESRC funded project into ‘ The Response to Microelectronics in the Service Sector ’ is closely associated with the Centre , and has conducted investigations into new technology and work organisation in banks , hospitals and retail stores .
4 Rolle is emphatic that " ryghtwysnes " is not in the discipline itself , but it is the fruit of it , a state of inner freedom untouched by the constraints of outward circumstances : He recognises that the will to effect such inner effort has to be awakened — drawn — that it is the response to goodness in men and in Christ , and to the joy of heaven , which starts to work man 's salvation .
5 This definition was used by Cohen to explain the response to youth in the 1950s and 1960s but it can be similarly applied to moral crises in the more distant past — one may refer by way of example , to the nexus of fears generated by the French Revolution , which significantly shaped the contours of ‘ Victorian ’ sexuality , or the anxieties which produced the legislative restructuring of the 1880s and 1900s , or the fears generated by the cold war in the 1950s .
6 They have not handed over the arguments to be articulated by lawyers and scientists even now that they have taken the city and the tannery to court in a law-suit claim for $31 million .
7 Mr Dane ( 50 ) from Mountsandel Road , Coleraine , had taken the board to court in March following his dismissal for allegedly failing in his duties to train junior doctors .
8 This situation is a common occurrence in stronger winds when the inexperienced sailor lacks the technique to sheet in fully , so he edges along partly ‘ closing the door ’ , and as a result slowly turns into the wind .
9 Charles Booth 's reports and the need for bodies like the Salvation Army and Dr Barnardo 's Homes show the other side of the coin to life in the Hampstead villas .
10 Famed for its hospitality and wildlife , New Zealand is also renowned among campers for the wonderful national parks ' accommodation system — you have the freedom to camp in the middle of nowhere , or you can pay a small sum and use their lodges .
11 BIRON prompts the user to type in a topic for which data are sought .
12 The rival patentees quarrelled for over a decade , taking the fight to Parliament in 1624 .
13 With local elections looming in the near future , Communist leaders in Warsaw are already fearing another serious loss , possibly even more humiliating than the loss to Solidarity in national elections last June .
14 The designer , Henry E. Coe , allowed for natural ventilation by arranging for the roof to part in the centre by the use of pulleys .
15 In the face of doubts about the truths of religion , could bereaved parents still take courage and assume that their children 's death meant only a brief separation , the prelude to reunion in happier surroundings ?
16 This is the prelude to disaster in which soil , crops , and ( particularly ) livestock can suffer as much as the farmer .
17 A member of the Scottish Girls ' team for the European Team championship , she led the side to victory in the Home Internationals .
18 They see part of the key to success in clever ideas for retuning , which are secrets as closely guarded as the recipe for Coca Cola .
19 ‘ A high degree of professionalism is the key to success in today 's complex and competitive world . ’
20 Confidence is the key to success in partnerships : the more happy experiences the better .
21 The key to success in collecting information , however , is not so much the organizational ability of the clearinghouses , but the confidence of the librarians that their information and experience will be disseminated carefully , effectively , and , sometimes , with discretion .
22 The key to success in the best practice approach is the involvement , and subsequently the commitment , of as many people as possible .
23 RANGERS have been handed the key to success in the European Cup .
24 The key to success in heading abroad is getting these first planning basics right .
25 In them you will see in the hands of a master ( though not every book he writes is farce crime ) how to achieve that build-up of ever more ridiculous events that is the key to success in this form of crime fiction .
26 As we saw in the previous chapter on Leadership , the key to success in leadership is to obtain the best ‘ mix ’ of attention to task and attention to people , taking the total situation into account .
27 The hon. Gentleman surely realises that the key to success in that industry is lower interest rates and that the key to lower interest rates is lower inflation .
28 The treaty defining relations between West and East Germany ( 1972 ) represented a rejection of Adenauer on two key issues : first , it accepted the legitimacy and moral equivalence of East Germany , and secondly it saw accommodation with East Germany as the key to peace in Europe , whereas Adenauer 's policy had been to turn his back on East Germany in the name of freedom and democracy .
29 Donna Haber , from ASTMS who is also a member of an OECD expert group looking at safety in the biotechnology industry , says that the key to safety in biotechnology is planning in advance .
30 He believed house prices — the key to recovery in the market — would firm by the end of the year .
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