Example sentences of "[adj] to [adj] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Perhaps her greatest accomplishment came when she assumed from 1895 to 1899 the editorship and proprietorship of the Woman 's Signal , one of the most influential and outspoken feminist periodicals . |
2 | Kochan points out from 1895 to 1905 the strike movement grew , increasingly it had political rather than simple economic concerns . |
3 | Some people do this to such an extent that although they never get angry , they are not always kind or tolerant , and can be cold , dogmatic people . |
4 | We have achieved this to such an extent that had the Community Charge still been in operation it would have been 40 less than last year 's figure . |
5 | Emily Faithfull herself rather naively replied to one questioner : Suppose a printer receives from 30s to 36s a week and suppose his wages were reduced 10s per week , and his daughters who before had been in no employment receive each 10s , 12s or 15s … |
6 | The number of representations to the Home Office is running at 700 to 800 a year , but only about five of those cases are referred to the Court of Appeal . |
7 | However , from 1972 to 1984 the Department of Trade and Industry gave grants under the Mineral Exploration and Investment Grants Act 1972 for mineral exploration for the ores of non-ferrous metals , fluorspar , barium minerals and potash , provided the results were deposited with the British Geological Survey . |
8 | The radial shields are large , contiguous and extend half to three-quarters the radius of the disk . |
9 | When constructing scatterplots , make the Y -axis one-half to two-thirds the length of the X -axis ; as a guide , think of exercise paper , which is usually of these dimensions , turned on its side . |
10 | It is possible that Mexico has also been approached , but again there is no indication that the latter has proved responsive to such an offer . |
11 | Charting aviation 's history from 1903 to 1991 the tome is illustrated with no less than 4,000 photographs . |
12 | It was implicitly understood in this agreement that a political solution would ultimately involve the emergence of a coalition regime within the framework of a settlement ; the Soviet Union indicated to a number of non-aligned states including India that it was not averse to such a development . |
13 | He said Bonn was favourably disposed to such a conference if it were well prepared . |
14 | Last May the plant at Cowley in Oxford decided to double its rate of production of the models from 300 to 600 a week for markets in the UK , France and Spain . |
15 | However , increasing use of the structural Funds and institutional arrangements to aid the market process may be more likely to be acceptable to all the member states , as the success of Germany and Japan ( who practise considerable intervention in their economies ) , has indicated the benefits of using such policies . |
16 | The circumstances were very similar to those the lad at Sunderland finds himself in now , ’ he said . |
17 | However , the overall response was clearly favourable to such a measure . |
18 | Yet the highest of them all , Elbrus , has a route that would be accessible to many a mountaineer with only one of two alpine seasons behind him ; a route that demands no real technical expertise , but an ability to adapt to altitude , and a fair degree of stamina . |
19 | Moreover , the civil and political status and rights of the citizen , central to such a reform , must be enshrined in a bill of rights . |
20 | However , it is important to decide at this stage whether that part of an express clause which seeks to control competition during employment is also subject to such a test . |
21 | In the case of a public company subject , at the time of its registration or re-registration , to a pre-1982 pre-emptive requirement , sections 89 to 95 do not apply to an allotment of the equity securities which are subject to such a requirement . |
22 | The issue of public interest immunity arises because , quite apart from the considerations underlying the implied undertaking , the particular class of documents here in question is clearly recognised on authority to be subject to such a claim . |
23 | While the nature of the plaintiff 's interest may as argued above affect the content of natural justice or fairness , the argument from Schmidt , which equates the absence of procedural protection with the absence of a right to stay , is subject to all the criticism of such reasoning outlined in the discussion of employment relationships . |
24 | From the 1840s to 1900 the proportion of illegitimate births declined throughout Europe , from 7 per cent to less than 4 per cent , with no evidence that chastity outside marriage had become more popular . |
25 | Remember that a transfer to joint tenants , such as a man and his wife , on the form of transfer appropriate to such a transaction ( 19(JP) ) , requires execution by the transferees as well as by the transferor , because it contains a declaration that the survivor can ( or can not ) give a valid receipt for capital money arising on a disposition of the land . |
26 | It is more appropriate to such a case than is Form N79 but , unlike Form N79 , does not inform the contemnor that he can apply to the court to purge his contempt and ask for release . |
27 | As has already been noted ( pp , 92–3 ) , Bickersteth had argued , even before the outbreak of the war , that English ( if constituted as the university in miniature ) was the academic discipline best suited to offer a degree of human wisdom appropriate to such a task . |
28 | In the first place , as the title makes plain , if offers a searching criticism of the claim that we are living in a postmodern epoch , and the consequence of that claim , that the culture and politics appropriate to such an epoch are structurally different from those of the preceding — and now past — Modern one . |
29 | Keynes 's refutation of this theory as a description of labour market behaviour in a money using economy , and this formulation of a theory of labour market adjustment which was more appropriate to such an economy , have been glossed over by Friedman and his followers as if they were nothing more than minor , rather idiosyncratic footnotes in the history of economic ideas . |
30 | At one mill from 1804 to 1814 the weight of wool spun weekly increased from 12 to 18 lb per man , but wages advanced from 32s 6d to 44s 6d ( £1.62½ — £2.22½ ) . |