Example sentences of "[conj] [v-ing] them on [art] " in BNC.

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1 The importance of locational specifications in general can be gauged from the fact that there seem to be two basic ways of referring to objects — by describing or naming them on the one hand , and by locating them on the other ( Lyons , 1977a : 648 ) .
2 Less practical is physical destruction like squashing or bashing them on the head .
3 ‘ We are glad the owner has handed over the pictures of his own free will rather than selling them on the Western art market . ’
4 Bowes Museum is an art museum not a theme park , exercising children 's eyes and minds — their curiosity , powers of observation and fledgling intelligence — rather than taking them on a rollercoaster ride .
5 By now , having experienced the sensation of flying , he felt that his future was in flying the aircraft rather than servicing them on the ground ; in April 1934 he was finally accepted for pilot training .
6 ‘ Have I said something , then ? ’ he asked , taking off his cap and overcoat and hanging them on the door peg .
7 Had the Presbytery been selecting candidates and foisting them on the DUP , Smyth 's view would be more plausible .
8 ‘ We know that , Mr Vigo , ’ he said , wrenching his eyes away and fixing them on an eggshell thin service , made to contain jasmine tea .
9 They started doing ‘ breakdown ’ [ lifting the boys above their heads and dropping them on the ground ] .
10 She kept walking round her box , sighing , and picking bits out of her haynet and dropping them on the floor .
11 ‘ I have n't the faintest , ’ said Shirley , taking off her outdoor shoes and putting them on the rack , putting on her indoor slippers , and guiltily , belatedly , bending down to wipe the shoe marks off the linoleum with spit and hanky .
12 ‘ And there 's some shortbread and chocolates and a jar of chicken breasts , ’ she said , taking them out of the basket and putting them on the table .
13 Mrs Foster bobbed about collecting the items and putting them on the counter .
14 It , it , it just went on for a lit a short time afterwards but er , but when the war ended course things , some things changed pretty rapidly as you can appreciate but , but by this time I , I was working for Ellwells then on long distance transport and we used to have to go and fetch tractors or bulldozers that had got armour plating on from Dagenham docks and bring them up here and start selling them to civic contractors and the , the Americans were selling a lot of equipment as well at end of the war , and I saw money made overnight like , people were buying the lorries and putting them on the road you know for work and transport firms and all that and they were getting some of them for next to nothing
15 I think we all feel we would like more central capital funding , but without it , it 's quite proper that we make er the best of use of the , of the assets we 've got , and we were n't using all our estate as effectively as we might , so for the last few years , we 've had a very vigorous programme of identifying land and buildings that are no longer required , and putting them on the market and thereby enabling us to build new facilities .
16 Lucinda jumped to her feet , collecting cups , plates and cutlery together and placing them on the tray .
17 When I arrived on tie scene there appeared to be hundreds of people there , but a civilian — the works and bricks engineer seemed — to be the boss , and even the station commander was happily taking orders from him about filling sandbags and placing them on the Bund to strengthen it against the rising tide .
18 My master was in the habit , when he was particularly busy with his scientific work , of writing orders on pieces of paper and leaving them on the stairs .
19 Yet , there also appear dangers in resting content with proposing apparent similarities between past and present and leaving them on the table , as it were .
20 She picked it up and set it on her knee , then began taking out the yellow and black wooden pieces and setting them on the board .
21 Lizzie was taking off her coat and hat now and laying them on a chair as she said , ‘ I 'm fine , fine .
22 ‘ You can eat these later , once we 've disarmed them , ’ he told her , wrapping them in more tissues and laying them on the back seat .
23 Taking the boats out of the water and loading them on the cars is a chore .
24 ‘ Crew members are tearing dolphins out of the net and dumping them on the deck with little or no attention to whether they are alive or dead .
25 IBM made the announcement at the Semiconductor Industry Association meeting in San Jose , where it said that its Technology Products unit would have to start shuttering plants if it did n't succeed in its new initiative of selling chips to other vendors and offering them on the merchant market .
26 After emancipation the state could transform recruitment by enlisting more people each year but putting them on the reserve list much sooner .
27 Late-night scheduling has been a consistent feature of lesbian and gay programming , exploiting the gay audience 's motivation to watch these programmes while keeping them on the edges of broadcasting .
28 Canonisation of artists has exploded : whereas in the last century you worshipped either Rubens or Botticelli , depending on your aesthetic credo , now it is legitimate to worship Gerome as well as Manet , while putting them on the same altar as living legends like Schnabel , Kiefer and Koons .
29 Moreover , it will not be long before common-or-garden programs can vary the weight and shape of letters instantaneously , as well as setting them on the page .
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