Example sentences of "[noun] in [art] [noun pl] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Indeed , this is the most significant aspect of the role of religion in the divisions and conflicts in Ireland and goes to the heart of the matter .
2 In all cases English kings had to come to terms with the conditions which they found in these three different countries ; and in all cases they had to show an ability to adapt themselves and their armies to new conditions , military , social and economic , as well as to new thinking in the ways that armies were formed and war was fought .
3 But spare a thought for the Isle of Man Government 's treatment of depositors in the Savings and Investment Bank .
4 Further along the path , also on the right , are small fissures in the clints that may be passed unnoticed : one of these , Flood Entrance Pot , was the first alternative way down into Gaping Gill when the main shaft was impassable .
5 The poems may almost be considered as examples of literary collaboration , and , though her own attempts at verse were not successful , the originality and freshness of perception in the Journals and her letters make a clear case for assessing her as a ‘ poet ’ in her own right .
6 Thus the lack of balance which strikes anyone looking at a thoroughly drained , treeless landscape is reflected in a lack of honest balancing in the books and ledgers which lie behind that landscape .
7 Anne was more comfortable with the married women she worked with , many of them with husbands in the Forces and with the same problems and hopes as herself .
8 The casual labour force in the hotels and catering industry is not a homogeneous one .
9 Whilst this decision has been criticised as a " narrow " interpretation of the law ( ibid ) , our examination of the nature of casual working and the characteristics of the casual labour force in the hotels and catering sector raises the question of whether according casual workers employee status , and thus bringing them within the coverage of employment protection legislation , would be of any great relevance .
10 The English government maintained a small military force in the islands but it was not large enough to guarantee the English population against slave revolt or foreign invasion , and the settlers had to make an effort on their own account as well .
11 This growth in the proportion of overseas equities in the portfolios and subsequent decline has been mirrored by a fall in the importance of UK company shares over 1980–1984 , but a resurgence since then at the expense of overseas securities .
12 Most people follow the recommendation in the instructions and try to restore one face first , then follow with the adjacent layer and the remaining face .
13 The County Champs are only a month or so away , and you 're thinking you 've got to get some speed in the legs before the serious stuff gets underway .
14 Groups like the Welsh Language Society and the Free Wales Army were said to be training freedom fighters in the mountains and he was barracked everywhere he went .
15 The written down value has no relation to the market value of an asset and thus there can be a profit or loss in the accounts when it is sold .
16 The written down value has no relation to the market value of an asset and thus there can be a profit or loss in the accounts when it is sold .
17 Furthermore , Rumbaugh 's programme does not obviate the use of trainers to interest the animals in the keyboards and to guide their reactions .
18 Shortly afterwards , horses , chickens , birds , dogs and other animals in the arenas and the farm began to die .
19 They can move their eyes in the sockets and most see colours as we do .
20 For the novelist works to one side — hence parajournalist — of the writer busy with magazine polemics in Time and Epoch , just as his novel exists to one side — parajournalism — of the double murder in the newspapers and of scary sciencefictionish forewarnings about microbes .
21 It is , however , an unusual building in that , although it conforms to the Vladimir plan and Byzantine pattern , the architect introduced Italian fifteenth century building methods , using light bricks and tie rods in the arches and vaults .
22 Ruby 's forte was getting her own photograph in the newspapers as she ‘ arrived at the police station to advise officers working on the such-and-such case ’ ; she was a popular television chat show guest ; and she made a decent living from writing about psychometry .
23 Poor circulation in the hands and feet is usually caused by a narrowing of the very tiny blood capillaries .
24 To boost circulation in the thighs and calves , place your hands on the skin , fingers pointing away from you .
25 The images that go through Alfred Hayley 's mind in the minutes before he dies follow similar patterns , but in all three cases the discursive deviation is localized and explained within the novel as a product of the suspension of reason .
26 Ann found it very difficult to tell , just as she had found it difficult to fathom out the workings of Martha 's mind in the days before she and her twin were married .
27 This caused some confusion in the grandstands as most spectators did not realise that they had gone through Kyle and O'Grady .
28 It was also a vital information centre , where spies mingled with oilmen , where officials of the local security forces met heir hookers , and where the waiters brought valuable intelligence every morning from their homes in the rabbit warrens in the ghettos and barrios where few diplomats or reporters dared go .
29 Since the areas under occupation contained rich grain lands as well as the industrialised sectors of Russian Poland as it was then , the food shortages in the towns and the goods famine in the countryside were further exacerbated .
30 There is a big fear in the hills that in order to maintain businesses in the lowlands , people will diversify into sheep , and the profitability of sheep in the lowlands will be greater . ’
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