Example sentences of "[adv] [art] [noun] and [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Drawing from his experience of Japan , Johnson ( 1984 : p. 8 ) considered that this ‘ means the initiation and co-ordination of governmental activities to leverage upward the productivity and competitiveness of the whole economy and of particular industries in it … |
2 | Secondary objectives of the project are to develop an appropriate framework within the linkages between financial markets and dynamic efficiency gains can properly be understood ; to assess empirically the role and effectiveness of the market for corporate control in promoting dynamic efficiency gains ; and to provide a stronger basis for policy in the areas of stock market regulation , competition policy , and support for innovation in relation to these long term efficiency considerations . |
3 | Eventually the north and south works will be redeveloped as a business park , creating up to 5,000 new jobs . |
4 | For registry staff to monitor effectively the accuracy and completeness of this operation requires detailed record-keeping and effortless access to data . |
5 | By mid-century , therefore , almost every European government was making efforts to control more effectively the recruitment and promotion of its diplomats . |
6 | Altogether the timing and pattern of this increase suggests that it is connected with an increase , shift or change in habits of a continental population , rather than the British . |
7 | Although a late developer , it began to take on the size and conformation of an excellent Clydesdale stallion . |
8 | But they dare n't take on the decisions and responsibility that would allow them to make their own alternatives , and to drop right out . |
9 | The turning-point in his fortunes came in October 1861 , when he was asked to take on the printing and publishing of the Union newspaper , which was trying to bring Tractarian Anglicans into touch with Roman Catholics . |
10 | It is thus that ‘ national liberation ’ , or the breakaway movements , so often take on the colour and rhetoric of the group they see as dominating them . |
11 | Same list of icecream flavours hung on the wall and bowl of aniseed lollipops on the counter , same gilt baskets of croissants and racks like umbrella stands packed with tall loaves . |
12 | The people bounding around the room appeared to be transforming , taking on the shape and form of the animal masks they were wearing . |
13 | The man felt his melancholy enlarge as if — oddly — to take on the shape and texture of what was before him . |
14 | If this sounds too outrageous then the art department of the local secondary school might take on the design and painting of a mural as a project for older pupils with children from the primary school working as their apprentices . |
15 | Massage the skin and pass on the pressure and bingo ! |
16 | Or perhaps it is that if we try to take on the identity and authority of the Weaving Mother the consequences will be severe ; our own personal weavings are only part of a much greater pattern , which we can not control or take credit for . |
17 | Often now when I set off in a fairly posh car and switch on the radio and heater , I think back to those wartime battles to get my little fishing box onto the crowded trams and my long walks from Brigg railway station to catch bream at Cadney Bridge . |
18 | With the last of her dresses hanging in the wardrobe , undies neatly folded in the drawer , Lindsey switched on the radio and bedside lamp . |
19 | The refusal to be responsible and motivated , to get a job , to take on the brutalization and disenchantment entailed in ‘ gainful ’ employment . |
20 | It was from these regions that Catalan industry was to draw its cheap labour , while the wild valleys of the Pyrenees were an enclosed world with a tradition of brigandage and family feuds ; here Carlism was to take on the violence and cruelty of the local society . |
21 | One , however , was the decision to establish a European Movement which would have a National Council in each country , to carry on the debate and pressure governments . |
22 | The study of History at Advanced level is not merely the collection of facts about the past , but is rather the explanation and interpretation of the relationships between those facts . |
23 | Within the Tory Party , what ultimately matters is not how many friends you have , but rather the power and strength of your enemies . |
24 | The diagnosis of dysplasia is beset with problems , as discussed above , furthermore the significance and outcome of high grade dysplasia is unpredictable . |
25 | The coefficients applied to the various expenditure categories have been aggregated and weighted from across a number of industry sectors listed in the input-output tables eg the bottling and packaging coefficient has been weighted from glass production ( input-output industry number 17 ) , pulp , paper board ( input-output number 82 ) and paper and board ( input-output number 83 ) . |
26 | Examine relevant factors affecting those markets ( eg the success and profitability of insurers ; proposals for arbitration within the NHS ; local employment trends ) to estimate the potential volume of work for the future . |
27 | Where a lease defines something by reference to a statute or statutory instruments ( eg the Town and Country Planning ( Use Classes ) Order ) , a change in the statute or statutory instrument will not alter the terms of the lease ( Brewers Co v Viewplan [ 1989 ] 2 EGLR 133 ) . |
28 | Apparently the Galway and Aran fishermen of those days had the usual fishermen 's superstitions . |
29 | And of his views in the 1840s he wrote : " We were now much less democrats than I had been , because so long as education continues to be so wretchedly imperfect , we dreaded the ignorance and especially the selfishness and brutality of the mass … " ( p. 138 ) |
30 | It shows Mr Lamont needs to continue supporting industry , especially the manufacturing and construction sectors . |