Example sentences of "[pron] be then [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I was then a disciple of Herbert Read 's and his " education of the senses " , but it was Basil , ill the no-nonsense power of his belief , who did much to give me a life-long conviction about the place of art education .
2 I was then a year old and she was with us till I was nearly four .
3 And after that er we shall be taking the running order which is then a sketch next , which is not cast yet
4 ‘ I want to be in your place ’ collapses temporarily into ‘ I want you ’ ; identification merges with desire , which is then a desire to be/displace the male as other .
5 An identification consequent on a prior dislocation can make for a creative , empathetic partiality which is then the basis of a further identification and understanding of other kinds of discrimination .
6 It is the entire field which produces this outcome , which is then an effect of the field or structure .
7 The Hungerfords of Farleigh Hungerford , the all-powerful local family in medieval times , bought Iford , which was then a mill , in 1369 and held on to it for four centuries .
8 In July 1663 , Richard Baxter left London for reasons of health and went to live in Acton , which was then a village six miles west of the capital .
9 His parents were from Dukinfield , which was then a hamlet in the parish of St. Mary , Stockport , where they were buried .
10 He never made the seventy-mile journey from Aix to Geneva , which was then the centre of the international world .
11 The explanation is apparently that the proceedings were launched with little notice and J. 's mother and those advising her wished to have an opportunity of acquiring further expert evidence which would , they hoped , support her view and that which was then the view of the local authority , namely , that artificial ventilation should be used if necessary .
12 Anyone entitled to free legal aid who is then a party to an appeal against a care or supervision order will qualify for non-means tested legal aid in respect of the appeal subject to a merits test .
13 Four years after her husband died she returned from the United States to marry her foster father , Mr Taylor , who was then a widower :
14 Of all this only 40s. was recorded , at Marlow , in 1522 , in the name of Thomas , who was then a ward himself .
15 The crucial suggestion was made in 1972 by Jacob D. Bekenstein , who was then a graduate student at Princeton University and is now at the University of the Negev in Israel .
16 ‘ When Adam delved and Eve span , ’ he chanted , ‘ who was then the gentleman ? ’
17 But the time came when Graham Thomas , who was then the Trust 's Gardens Adviser , suddenly had to produce a report and I began to see that it was n't quite like the old days .
18 A partner in her firm of solicitors knew Lord Aldington , who was then the chairman of Sun Alliance Insurance , which handled the case ; and asked him to look at it .
19 One was Thereza Imanishi-Kari , who was then an immunologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ( MIT ) .
20 On his death there were then no freehold estates to pass and therefore no liability to feudal dues .
21 Erm , it , what it struck me as is a parallel with Freud 's idea of transference , you know that once something happens in the , in the traumatic period in a , in a childhood , there 's then a tendency to transference to occur later in life , we recreate later in relationships to er the model of the early one and er it struck me that what you said about French industrial relations sounded a bit like transference in erm in the psychoanalysis the idea that i i it spills out as it were from the initial which might have been saved er within the family to other relationships i in later life that people have with their superiors at work or something I mean you can see this actually sometimes you know that people have relationships with their superiors which are clearly erm based on erm their relationships with their parents and they see the , th their boss as a parental figure and the employee sees themselves as er as , as , as a kind of erm child and it shows itself sometimes in quite er quite unmistakable ways .
22 When that vote is finished er there there 's then the opportunity for further amendment .
23 There is then no selection , and an inevitable decline in viability and fertility .
24 Given that the planning margin ( spare generating capacity above maximum demand ) could be trimmed from its present high value of 28 per cent , there is then no case , as the CEGB itself admits , for immediately building Sizewell on the grounds that the board will be short of capacity without it .
25 There is then no room in the instruction to specify both a jump address and the address of the location to be tested .
26 There is then no confusion between ground-state and excited-state information .
27 Erm there is then a case for that policy to be covered in the structure plan and of course in local plans and at the local plan stage there is an opportunity for councils to er interpret the structure plan policy to add er exceptions if they so wish and for those to be tested at a local plan enquiry .
28 there is then a choice
29 There is then a question whether he is guilty of an offence if the mistake he makes is an unreasonable one , or whether any mistake will exculpate .
30 And there is then a word babiwanjit for people who call each other babi .
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