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

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1 These natural discontinuities in our perception of the responsibility time span create hierarchical strata that people in different companies , countries and circumstances all seem to regard as genuine and acceptable .
2 Returning now to the referral and investigation work undertaken by the team between October 1987 and March 1988 , Table 3 provides some detail about the range of activities on which the total time of 253 hours was spent and shows that the bulk of the activity time was spent in direct contact with children and/or their caregivers .
3 You can read the actual old newspapers in the offices of the Oban Times , not a microfiche in sight .
4 Oh we used to work er f er six days a week , er all day Saturdays erm eight to eight and er eight till eight at n at er eight till seven at night or er or eight till eight at erm most shifts was early , they used to have a a an hour er an hour break of a dinner time er sometimes they only used to have half an hour at night because , I mean well once you 've got er y y you was there , once you get you shift done it was no good sitting there doing for an hour and er it , it varies on what production what was wanted and how far advanced you was or how far behind you was , you know , but er the average hours was as I say was ten hours a shift that was working shift , you worked ten hours and then a break in between , ten minutes , half an hour
5 Andrew Neil of the Sunday Times ( the one she did it with ) : Donald Trelford of the Observer ( the one she did n't do it with ) and Peregrine Worsthorne , former editor of The Sunday Telegraph ( the one who criticised the one she did it with , and who was sued for his criticisms , and lost ) .
6 Until recently art critic of The Sunday Times , Marina Vaizey was paid just over £30,000 a year with free BUPA cover .
7 In general , the amounts of refluxed acid were low , the average person having acid in the oesophagus for about 3% of the recording time .
8 There is even an echo of the testing time of his twelfth year in the fourth book in the sequence , The Betrayer , when he has to find a way of helping one of the Confederates , involved in a misguided conspiracy against the young Emperor , without being disloyal to his ruler .
9 In June 1989 , Neville Hodgkinson and Peter Gillman of the Sunday Times reported that Clive Ahrens had been found to have aluminium in his hip bone , laid down as a band ( as is common in people living in areas of high lead in water ) .
10 Finally , one of the students whom I had worked with a couple of summers previously came back to me just before I left post to discuss his third year project at Shrivenham and I was able to arrange for him to do a project involving the linking of a commercial graphical package to the expert system developed as part of the war time operation aid mentioned previously .
11 This meant that a large part of the lesson time was wasted getting on buses and to and from the slopes instead of learning to ski and also a lot of walking around in boots and carrying skis .
12 Notably , suppression of the AIR-1 phenotype by transfection with heterologous DNA ( 22 ) also caused a reduction of the doubling time , suggesting that either class II antigen expression affects the growth of the cell or that the AIR-1 mutations has pleiotropic effects .
13 A fail-safe system triggered a red signal , giving the driver of the train time to stop and remove the obstacle .
14 Someone else brought fifty-two copies of the Sunday Times colour supplement .
15 I 'm talking about quarter past seven , at this time , well there 's no real need for them to be up now it 's just that if they get , they like to have a a little bit of a play time .
16 A controversial example is the liability of the Sunday Times and Independent newspapers in the famous Spycatcher case .
17 It was thus found that the majority of the reaction time required was in identifying the values of the card and choosing the pile onto which it should be placed .
18 Tipler 's description of a working time machine is a cylinder with the density of a neutron star , 100 km long and 10 km in radius , rotation twice every millisecond ( New Scientist , vol. 87 , p 654 ) , superficially , such an object would be a lot like a fast pulsar , since pulsars are thought to be rotation neutron stars , but the fastest pulsar known when Tipler made his calculations was the Crab pulsar , with a period of 30 milliseconds .
19 However , the judgement of the London Times of 7 October on the affair was probably widely shared by political and public opinion in Britain :
20 In one way you feel better knowing that we played well , the other way li ‘ l ol ’ Victor springs to the fore of the mind time and again .
21 The important findings are that although transient DGR is present in healthy subjects , it occurred for a significantly greater proportion of the study time in patients with gastric ulcers and in patients with persistent pain after gastric surgery ( Fig 1 ) .
22 In our study continuous monitoring showed that DGR occurred in all patients with gastric ulcers , and that it occurred for a significantly greater proportion of the study time than in normal controls .
23 In 1861 he married Frances Jane , daughter of Thomas Baines [ q.v. ] , a former editor of the Liverpool Times ; they had five sons ( one of whom died as a child ) and four daughters .
24 , George Josiah ( 1828–1892 ) , founder and first editor of the Church Times , was born in Clapham , Surrey , 30 June 1828 , the eldest son and second child in the family of four sons and a daughter of George Josiah Palmer , printer , of Savoy Street , Strand , and his wife Charlotte , daughter of John Hatchard [ q.v. ] , the Evangelical publisher and bookseller , founder of Hatchards in Piccadilly .
25 This subject had interested him , both as contributor to and editor of the magazines Time and Epoch in the years immediately before he wrote Crime and Punishment .
26 At a Fabian fringe meeting , Andrew Neil , editor of The Sunday Times and executive chairman of Rupert Murdoch 's Sky Television , made a speech , of course in his own and his boss 's interest , which had a sense and vigour that the conference platform could dearly do with .
27 Andrew Neil , editor of The Sunday Times , welcomed the commission 's decision and said his newspaper would certainly pursue the case to the bitter end .
28 He will be replaced by Mr Roy Greenslade , aged 42 , associate editor of the Sunday Times .
29 Maureen Walker is a ‘ design writer and stylist ’ — after ten years as Home Editor of the Sunday Times and writing a book on interiors , she has a wealth of experience to call on .
30 Harold Evans , once Editor of the Sunday Times , wrote that ‘ enough news is arriving today at any large newspaper office to make four .
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