Example sentences of "[conj] the [adj] [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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1 It 's not the stopping or the burning or the escaping to Africa that will make an end of it .
2 or the black and the cerise and all the jacquards
3 Certainly those working with the mentally ill or the handicapped or the senile or in health education may properly think it is .
4 Individually , judges may support the Conservative or the Labour or the Liberal parties .
5 Now that 's the kind of information that is absolutely vital for them to understand , in fact for us — I mean I myself am from the Third World — to understand what the problems are , but which can only be achieved with centres in the developed countries that are prepared to make this into a working programme erm for the benefit of both , because in very many cases improving erm the lot of the Third World on the question of revenue from commodities will also improve their position , or the British or the American , or the European consumer , by eliminating intermediaries and so on and so forth .
6 Or , come to think of it , the Fender , or the Gurian or the umm , other Martin .
7 For even the least reflexive or philosophical seem to be aware of the potential for reversal inherent in this system of power , where the sacred and the profane have the possibility of turning upon each other at every conjunction .
8 Alongside the synagogue is one of the most remarkable sights in Europe , the Old Jewish Cemetery , where the famous and the infamous are squeezed together , the crowded headstones looking like so many crooked teeth .
9 The new clause would provide a golden opportunity for the consultative committee to ensure that bus companies carry out recommendations that would ensure that the elderly and the disabled can travel on buses in Scotland in comparative safety .
10 As the Opposition believe that taxes , particularly local taxes , should be based on ability to pay , is it not absolutely scandalous that they suggest that the elderly and the single , whatever house they live in , should have to pay more than those with the ability to pay and are not willing to grant a discount ?
11 It is important to grasp birth control very much within the context of the particular customs and needs of groups of workers , and it is notable , for instance , that the poor and the unemployed generally had a high birthrate .
12 In the former interpretation , the speaking persona is placed in an imagined situational context which is evoked by the text itself , so that the real and the fictional enunciations are once again rather neatly separated from each other .
13 It may make us unhappy , but it insists that the mechanical and the material need n't be in charge .
14 Celia Haddon suggests that the celibate and the single are the nonconformists of our day .
15 The idea is to drop the notion that the handicapped and the non-handicapped are separate groups , whilst still acknowledging that certain children , possibly a fifth of all children educated , may require some form of special education .
16 Such a ‘ multi-factor ’ approach1 ( Lydall , 1968 ) brings inequality policy back into play by recognizing that the unequal and the poor have not simply chosen their lot , but it does retain the emphasis on education and training dominant in the human capital approach .
17 It is crucial that the practical and the theoretical should be given equal weight and equal prestige .
18 Given that we do indeed believe that the flipping and the starting each occurred , it is also true , and would certainly be more natural to say , that since the wipers started to work , the switch was flipped .
19 But what has been said so far , that the flipping and the circumstance including it were required for the wipers ' starting to work , is consistent with the cause existing without that effect .
20 However , he lists some areas where he feels that the aesthetic and the linguistic are making tentative advances towards each other and suggests grounds for hope ( and research ) .
21 This is an example of the abstract view of phonology where the way a word is represented phonemically may be significantly different from the actual sequence of sounds heard , so that the phonetic and the phonemic levels are quite widely separated .
22 Is n't it that the unconscious and the ego comes through
23 All of these bands explicitly lambast indie parochialism and neurotic fear of major label compromise ; all peddle an obsolete notion that the brash and the colourful represent a victory over the hegemony of a vague grey , with the naïve optimism of nineteenth-century dandies .
24 Of course , one major problem is ensuring that the experimental and the control groups are as alike as possible in all relevant respects .
25 Table 3.23 below shows that the unskilled and the semi-skilled manual workers made up a higher proportion of those receiving sickness or invalidity benefit than their size as a population group warranted ; the opposite was the case for the non-manual workers ; while the skilled manual workers ’ position as beneficiaries reflected their size as a group among the general population .
26 Set against this rather simplistic view of the neutrality and responsiveness of the state to the wishes of electors are pluralist writers who argue that there is certainly a necked for greater preparedness. hut that the military and the giant corporations in America have far more influence on the political system than they should and that they are a threat to liberal democracy .
27 The difficulty with this is that if Individuals-do not choose consciously to subvert democracy — as Mills has argued — why is it that the military and the large corporations as institutions have to dominate the political system and subvert liberal democracy ?
28 The rules that the British and the maharajas had created to protect their sport were seen as an evil of colonialism .
29 I accept completely what the honourable member for erm Truro Truro actually said in his speech just er that he just made , absolutely right that the cultural and the geographical identity of people matters so far as the European parliament is concerned and in respect of our responsibility , the responsibility of this house to citizens of Gibraltar .
30 The Revenue has raised an assessment charging tax in excess of £20,000 and has refused retirement relief on the sale of the milk quota because no land was sold ; farming continued after the sale ( in the Revenue 's view the provisions of s 53(2)TA88 mean that when a farmer changes the nature of his farming there is a continuation of the old trade and that the old and the new are equally applicable for CGT purposes ) ; the sales of the herd and milk quota were not effected at the same time .
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