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

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1 Families favour the Arts Centre over bed and breakfast accommodation because it offers a greater privacy .
2 This extremely perceptive analysis of the institutional mind fits the police world like a glove , and recent elaborations in policing , along with its growth in the mainstream of the daily social process , supports Douglas 's contention ( ibid. ) that an institution which is dependent upon authority can only demand more of the same .
3 We will be contacting the arts council with revised estimates showing the results of the grant standing still and with some views as to how the deficit can be reduced , ’ Mr Dunlop said .
4 It was a creature known in the Reconciled Dominions as a voider , one of a brutal species that haunted the wastes north of the Lenten Way .
5 One elderly Palestinian in Beirut wanted to draw a map of his olive grove for me and spent ten minutes sketching and re-sketching the roads south of Jaffa .
6 Taking his hint , Fei Yen straightened the p'i p'a in her lap and , after a moment 's concentration , began to play .
7 Redundancies reached an all-time high in the third quarter of 1992 , and , given the savings restriction on claiming benefits , there is an incentive to spend down to below this limit .
8 The Duke told him he had given the trees priority over the house because they took longer to become established , but Kalm drily commented in his diary that his wealth was such that he could have built ‘ a most handsome castle in one year or less ’ .
9 And true to form Flippin Shytalk roars across the line to win again … the National Championship should be their 's this summer … they defy the dangers week in week out … there 's no money to be won just fun to be had …
10 Islanders were concerned that pollution from the proposed mine would damage the islands supply of water , as well as contaminating their land and fishing grounds , the main livelihood on the island .
11 He conquered the still-surviving British kingdom of Elmet ( HB ch. 63 ) and extended over the men of Lindsey ( among whom the missionary Paulinus baptized at Lincoln and Littleborough ( HE II , 16 ) ) , a lordship which must soon have come to embrace the Mercians north of the Trent and , no doubt by slower degrees , those south of it .
12 Occasionally , rather than face the underwriting costs , purchasers may make the rights issue at a deep discount .
13 A journalist , for example , or a first aid attendant , or a person acting as an ‘ observer ’ for an organisation such as the N.C.C.L. does not really take part in the event itself , although he may occasionally make the police task of keeping order more difficult .
14 Now that the results of our efforts are showing in a return to profitability , everyone in Chemicals manufacturing knows that they have an important contribution to make in transforming the Chemicals business into a really successful part of Johnson Matthey .
15 The Kuwaiti Ministry of Public Works says the cost of completing the telecommunications tower in Kuwait City has risen to $175m from $110m : the increase is due mainly to damage done by the Iraqis during their occupation of the country , as well as changes in the project 's specifications and a rise in the cost of raw materials and labour .
16 Like Douglas , I see no point in setting up a false theoretical dichotomy between ‘ us ’ , and ‘ them ’ , creating separate realms and polarities of modern and archaic thought , for I anticipate my inclusion of the concept of self can help link the tribalism which haunts the police defensiveness to an understanding of their ‘ modern ’ beliefs , modes of thought , and action .
17 Each flies the Blues flag in his own unique way , but all the while there 's a perceptible epicentre , which nevertheless fights shy of any real definition …
18 SOUL singer Eddie Kendricks , who led The Temptations group to a string of hits in the 1960s , has died of lung cancer in Alabama .
19 ( 2 ) The offer must be made by paid advertisement in two national newspapers ( and the buyer must notify the Quotations Department of the London Stock Exchange and the target company of the terms thereof at least seven days before the tender offer closes ) .
20 The patient is asked to attend the Outpatients Department for the biopsy results which can take 7–10 days .
21 The role of the Needs Analysis is essentially to reveal user-related issues that should be taken into account when producing the requirements specification in the latter stages of a study .
22 It was six minutes before Didcot attacked the visitors goal as Mark O'Hara shot into a crowded goalmouth .
23 At a meeting of EC fisheries ministers on Dec. 17-18 to decide on fishing quotas for 1992 , it was agreed to continue the fisheries protection including the measures introduced in 1991 [ see p. 37925 ] under which North Sea fishing boats over 100 tonnes , more than 40 per cent of whose catch consisted of cod and haddock , to remain in port for eight consecutive days each month between Feb. 1 and Dec. 31 , 1992 .
24 Gordon Durie stole down the right and seeing the defences lack of organisation , he blasted in a low pass which McCoist drove home first time .
25 It was unclear to them why St Petersburg should promise the Turks assistance in return for the closure of the Dardanelles , when closing the straits between the Aegean and the Black Sea was a longstanding Turkish principle .
26 USH has approached the securities council for a ruling .
27 They had been briefed to report in on their mobile telephone at certain checkpoints en route , and to inform the Ops Room of any suspicious incidents , but their main task was to stop and talk to locals , in order to make their presence known in as friendly a way as possible .
28 understanding the purchasers intention re informing employees ( post-acquisitions integration .
29 The CNAA 's provisional Committee for Art and Design was willing only to accept the Honours Associateship for a classified honours degree , and the Associateship for an unclassified degree .
30 From Wilson 's Grammar School in Camberwell he won a scholarship to St Dunstan 's College , and from there in 1921 he entered the honours school of chemistry at University College London .
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