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

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31 Although useful for many unimodal sediments , in polymodal distributions the median may fall in the tails of two sub-populations of grains , in a size fraction which is scarce .
32 This will fall in the years to the end of the century to about three-quarters , due to a quadrupling of nuclear power consumption and a small increase in hydro power .
33 had conspired with certain other young persons to produce a magazine that would corrupt the morals of young children and other young persons and had intended to arouse and implant in the minds of these young people lustful and perverted desires .
34 These are taught to the initiate to show him the accepted response to the vagaries of order , disorder , ambiguity , and ambivalence which lies in the complexities of social behaviour .
35 The other objection , which I personally would see as more formidable , lies in the complications of development in sexuality and relationships which must usually arise in the child partner .
36 So real intellectual sovereignty lies in the norms of cognition …
37 The direct , if fragmentary , evidence for this history lies in the archives of the earth , the sedimentary rocks .
38 The reason for this lies in the limitations to which I have already referred .
39 Hundreds more may be missing in the disaster at Llipi , in Bolivia , which lies in the foothills of the Andes .
40 If the essence of infanticide lies in the effects of the stresses consequent upon recent childbirth , then it is this , and not the age of the victim , which should be the basis of the law .
41 Dido 's sobbing for her old lover even as she lies in the arms of her new one — this melancholy , which Virgil , and following him Hardy , responded to with such sympathy , is for Pound deathly , it precludes the genuinely ‘ new ’ , which he urgently wants to find and to celebrate .
42 The result , erected in 1812–15 , was Lewis 's largest undertaking ; but his best work lies in the products of his private practice , in the series of houses such as Bletchingdon Park , Oxfordshire ( 1782 ) , Eydon Hall , Northamptonshire ( 1788–9 ) , Lavington Park , Sussex ( 1790–4 ) and Hackthorn Hall , Lincolnshire ( 1793–5 ) , which are elegant neo-classical versions of the Palladian villa form , with interior decoration in the manner of Robert Adam [ q.v . ] .
43 Much interest , it is argued , lies in the ways in which the students justify their own versions in terms of their expectations about well-formedness in narrative .
44 In the case of a polluted river , the remedy lies in the hands of a national government .
45 The future of the species now lies in the hands of Gordon Reid , who runs the aquariums at the Horniman Museum in South London .
46 In theory , salvation lies in the hands of managements themselves .
47 The reasons for delay differ in civil and criminal procedure , not least because in civil matters the conduct of the action lies in the hands of the parties , who may agree through their lawyers to delays in proceedings .
48 Emphasising that " the key to a peaceful solution lies in the hands of Afghans themselves " , he said nevertheless that the talks had been made possible by the " new , positive and changing " United States attitude , a comment widely regarded as a reference to recent US congressional moves to cut aid to the mujahedeen by 10 per cent .
49 Remark The real meat in this theorem lies in the equalities of the degrees of G and g and of H and h .
50 Moreover , he considered that the most important and constant sexual difference lies in the regions of articulation .
51 The basic answer lies in the guesses about future cash flow .
52 Rather , its importance results from where it lies in the circuits of the left hemisphere and the way that it processes the inputs it receives .
53 ‘ If this judgment is less helpful than the parties hoped , as it almost certainly is , the reason lies in the terms of the statute , which places the discretion so unequivocally on the trial judge that it leaves little or no room for an appellate court to lay down principles or even guidelines .
54 The group award should specify outcomes which place due emphasis on the application of skills , knowledge and understanding in the conditions of the workplace .
55 The criteria for accreditation include a requirement that SVQs ‘ specify outcomes which place due emphasis on the application of skills , knowledge and understanding in the conditions of the workplace ’ as well as incorporating the Lead Body 's standards .
56 She has been acclaimed as the greatest Canadian painter of the century , while her four books are said to have reached new heights of perception and understanding in the annals of Canadian literature .
57 Wright is determined at last to become as prolific for his country as he always is for Arsenal especially with Alan Shearer lurking in the wings for Holland next month .
58 I 've had mine done twice , mine done twice , mm , the police were up the other day lying in ambush , and I 'd spotted them and phoned the local police station and said there 's men lurking in the bushes of are they policemen ? , she said yes madam , they 're policemen .
59 Lurking in the corridors of Brussels is a draft EC directive which could fundamentally change the way the Panel works .
60 There are entirely new powers hovering in the air , condensing in the future , lurking in the minds of man , which can be summoned as Prospero summoned Ariel ! ’
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