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

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1 Acceptance and usage of techniques pioneered by the economist J. M. Keynes ushered in the managed economy .
2 Last year , Sir Richard Body brought in a private member 's bill to introduce within five years a ban on the use of sow stalls and tethers — devices that make it easier and cheaper to manage the animals during their four months of pregnancy .
3 Mrs. Butler brought in the tea , and raised her eyes to heaven when she saw Jenny weeping again .
4 He was foaled on the South Island of New Zealand , and his entry in the catalogue for the 1928 Trentham Yearling Sales took the eye of Sydney-based trainer Harry Telford , who persuaded owner David Davis to send in a bid for the horse .
5 Five management personnel brought in a local French teacher , Eileen Hutchinson through Pontefract company ‘ Communication 92 ’ to lead them through two hours of French instruction each week using a text book and cassette tape course .
6 It was half-past four , when the dairy people brought in the cows .
7 While soccer 's purists quake at the thought of Graham Taylor bringing in the long-ball game , Ferguson insists Dublin 's arrival will not mean a switch to Route One football at Old Trafford .
8 There is talk , too , of Kenny McKinstry putting in an appearance to give his Subaru a pre-Donegal work-out following its trip to Barbados .
9 The 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act brought in a voucher system for the entry of Commonwealth citizens and distinguished between skilled and unskilled workers .
10 To tackle this , Mr Lamont brought in the most stringent proposals since Lord Howe under Baroness Thatcher in the early 1980s .
11 Tom Cruise puts in a fine performance as Ron Kovic , disabled Vietnam vet who fought back against indifference from the country he fought for , but somehow Oliver Stone 's direction still leaves the viewer unmoved by his plight
12 It 's the only way he will get some cash flow to bring in a couple of new faces .
13 After two and a half years , Mr Lawrence brought in the consultants , McKinsey & Co .
14 Elderflower buds become black if they are pressed when still green , and you could use these , or Clematis montana tendrils to fill in the design .
15 The back-channel reports on DEA operations that he had transmitted twice a week from his arrival in Cyprus were on file in a classified computer data bank , codenamed EMERALD , at Bolling Airforce Base , near Washington , and the first order of business upon his return was a systematic debriefing at a hotel near Fort Meade to fill in the gaps .
16 Jesus Christ brought in the Piscean Age ( hence , it is alleged , the ichthus fish sign of the new church and the numerous allusions to fishermen being turned into fishers of men ) .
17 Mummy would have Mrs Thing bring in a trolley with cakes and sandwiches and tell her to play the piano for the Guests .
18 In the late 1930s the Liverpool Police brought in a new ‘ discretionary movement ’ in which constables made half-hour points , which gave them relative freedom on the beat .
19 As the UN concludes , this is outdated , for the service multinationals bring in the ‘ soft technology ’ and skills required to run an efficient business .
20 The siege lasted almost a year , ; Philip VI put in an appearance with a relieving army at the beginning of August 1347 but he came to the conclusion that the English could not be dislodged and went away again .
21 Donor plea brings in a crowd !
22 The magazine text brings in the paradox of public and yet as if private utterance : ‘ His words were as if spoken to himself , but he spoke them aloud , and he continued for some time to look at his sister like a man perplexed . ’
23 According to the Guardian : ‘ the rector of St Tudy filled in the questionnaire for them .
24 The UK sales force fill in a weekly report form which includes questions about competitors — a successful campaign that somebody else has run , or a successful title — and room for suggestions for new titles or for areas of publishing .
25 He and the motor trader filled in the usual forms .
26 Property : Forward Planning : Making Proposals : Influencing the decision-makers : Allison Flight fills in the background to a planning application
27 Rents from the mine cottages brought in a monthly figure of from £7 to £19 .
28 Town planning legislation ushered in a rudimentary form of statutory planning based on local authority scheme preparation and control over building development .
29 If Soren Kierkegaard vitiated the easy-going philosophical idealism of his day with his heavily personalised challenges to it ; if von Rochau brought in the concept of Realpolitik to Bismarck 's Germany ; and if Karl Barth ushered in ‘ Crisis Theology ’ in Switzerland ; it is at least arguable that Irving Layton fathered ‘ Crisis Poetry ’ in Canada : poetry that demanded a decision , a response ; that cut through the emollient patter and posed a rough demand on the reader or hearer .
30 With some modifications the structure lasted until the 1972 Local Government Act ushered in a new pattern of elected local administration which became operative from 1 April 1974 , although this was further amended by the 1985 Local Government Act .
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