Example sentences of "[adv] [art] [noun] of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Agatha was arguably the daughter of King Stephen of Hungary , or of Bruno , brother of the German Emperor Henry II , or of a half-brother of the Emperor Henry III , or of none of them .
2 Moreover , popular culture was the subject , and arguably the condition of existence , of high modernist culture .
3 Arguably the process of centralization which has taken place could be presented as a necessary precursor to the decentralization of power which is desired .
4 I am dubious about their confidence that British industry is already experienced in a wide range of PWR work , and has technical and manufacturing competence at the levels ready to receive successfully the transfer of information specific to PWR components .
5 If Paul were to challenge successfully the adherents of Tammuz , Jesus would have to be able to match the older god , miracle for miracle .
6 In order to work successfully the notion of Partnership through Compact must involve all the personnel in the participating organisations including trade unions .
7 Even if the catechisms of ‘ correct thought ’ are updated and find new roots , and old upbeat endings are set to more popular and contemporary tunes , they will not be able to generate the more intricate models or maps which are required to confront successfully the types of racism which are evidenced by our two transcripts .
8 The Labour government , then , was not wholly the prisoner of dogma .
9 Thus in the light of much which has been surveyed here , it is impossible to view overmanning — the bane of British industry — as mainly if not wholly the consequence of union power .
10 A visiting fossilist from Aberdeenshire drew Johnson 's attention to a species of ash tree , enabling the great man to support his recurring arboreal obsession : ‘ The present nakedness of the Hebrides is not wholly the fault of Nature . ’
11 So far we have considered man-made materials where the composition reflects the processing , but the composition of materials such as stones and gems , which were used without chemical modification , can also sometimes indicate their source , and thereby the authenticity of artefacts made from them .
12 Costs and revenues are traced to these centres and compared with planned costs and revenues : thereby the performance of managers and their centres can be measured .
13 The copyholder , often equated with the poor peasant farmer , might well have been every bit as much a rentier as the lord of the manor , especially if a gentleman or wealthy townsman , earning thereby the disapprobation of Robert Crowley :
14 In this section we want to look firstly at why banks have an interest in expanding the volume of deposits and thereby the stock of money .
15 So it happened that both Polybius and Posidonius were involved in exploring the lands of the West , and more conspicuously the lands of France and Spain — with the consequences which I hope to illustrate in my next lecture .
16 Sometimes this knowledge is supplemented by some familiarity with theoretical linguistics illustrated by examples from the language in question , or more rarely the knowledge of literature is wholly or partly replaced and supplemented by knowledge of the contemporary history , sociology and economics of a country where the language is spoken .
17 However , the job itself , as we have already noted , is rarely the cause of disenchantment with agriculture — indeed , in a decade that has seen a renewed interest in the countryside among young people and a growing desire to escape from the urban rat-race , agriculture could have much to offer .
18 Burns , he said , were rarely the cause of death , though the resulting shock-induced pneumonia was .
19 Statesmen were rarely the tools of business in this period ; sometimes they made businessmen do their work for them and they were alive to the possibility of political influence being spread through such economic channels as chartered companies .
20 The sores that it produces are usually found on the external surface of the penis in the male , but rarely the site of infection may be inside the urethra , and in these cases recurrent ‘ non-specific urethritis ’ may occur , which is particularly resistant to treatment .
21 A letter of 1871 gives a vivid sense of the convictions which impelled her throughout her life : ‘ As I have grown older the terrible sufferings of women of my own class for want of good elementary training have more than ever intensified my earnest desire to lighten ever so little the misery of women brought up ‘ to be married and taken care of ’ and left alone in the world destitute .
22 It is predominantly the work of P.F. Robinson , a popular architect of the time who specialized in the ‘ Picturesque ’ and could translate your dream with ease .
23 The London we have now is predominantly the work of developers .
24 THIS CURIOUS 12″ is predominantly the work of Pogo 's sparring partner DJ Biznizz , and on ‘ Funky Rhymes … ’ the now label-less London Posse drop their only cut so far this year .
25 It also seems that the work of the Court of Appeal is predominantly the determination of appeals involving review .
26 And that the business has been predominantly the nature of business has been predominantly manufacturing .
27 It is not necessary , however , to see this change as predominantly the result of changes in the organisation of their manufacture .
28 The object of the book is not to analyse but to report , which is why it is predominantly the words of others taken from the radio series that I produced , In Other Words — David Bowie , a series that was narrated by Angie , David 's former wife .
29 First of these was our Himalayan hill-walk , albeit seen fro the comfort of Undercroft chairs , in the cheerful company of Bill Mitchell .
30 Keeping away fro the area of technicalities on migration .
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