Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] marks the " in BNC.

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1 While it may seem harsh to leave out Wood , the decision marks the start of Durham 's policy of rotating their bowlers .
2 Albert Einstein 's theory of general relativity suggests that the singularity marks the end of the future of the object .
3 San Diego-based Brooktree Corp and TRW Inc 's LSI Products Inc say they have reached a settlement of the patent infringement lawsuit filed by Brooktree in 1991 , and that terms of the agreement are favourable to both parties ; the settlement marks the end of all Brooktree 's current patent litigation .
4 A crossroads in the trail marks the site of the old Arthog Railway station and to the right you can see the village of Arthog .
5 ‘ They said so , but from the blood marks the fuzz think he could be wounded . ’
6 So shots of the family 's arrival help to start things off while the picnic marks the middle of the day , and serves to break up what might otherwise be a too lengthy sequence of beach games .
7 The deal marks the first time a Test match will be shown live , in full , from the sub-continent .
8 The deal marks the first venture by Peabody , already the biggest US coal-mining company , into the Pacific Rim .
9 But for local people , the closure marks the end of an era .
10 In the far distance , the prominent notch in the skyline marks the Creag a' Chalamain , the ‘ Rock of the pigeons ’ .
11 The work marks the end of a long battle at Darlington council over the best pedestrianisation plan for Darlington .
12 The arrow marks the site where the basal lamina ends ; to the rear of this , a normal basal lamina is clearly visible at higher magnification .
13 The Act marks the most significant shift in direction of the education service since that of 1944 .
14 The evening marks the launch of a new bursary to the University of Liverpool by Whitbread , to be awarded this year to the student whose ideas for the most effective use of a possible £1bn for Merseyside are judged to be the best .
15 The magnetopause marks the inner boundary of the agitated region which itself is called the magnetosheath .
16 The game marks the 600th league appearance of skipper Mickey Thomas , who earned a generous tribute from his manager .
17 The voter marks the candidates 1 , 2 , 3 , etc , in order of preference .
18 Not without biblical significance , the exhibition marks the artist 's seventieth birthday and coincides with a revival of interest in his work .
19 The exhibition marks the 52nd anniversary of the evacuation which took place from May 27 to June 4 , 1940 .
20 The exhibition marks the reopening of the palace after the European Summit in December .
21 For example , in the solo waltz the dancer marks the three beats of a waltz in roughly every other bar , usually with her feet , but in the third musical phrase she poses in arabesque and marks the beat by gradually lowering her hand three times .
22 A heart-shaped stone inlay in the road marks the site of the old Tolbooth where market tolls were collected , causing even more constriction in the narrow , lurching street .
23 The foundation of the ECSC marks the first significant step towards European union that went beyond being merely consultative and intergovernmental in character .
24 The project marks the fulfilment of a dream which was held by one of the city 's legendary entrepreneurs , the late Lord Leverhulme , who started building work on the replica castle in 1912 .
25 The project marks the fulfilment of a dream for one of the city 's legendary entrepreneurs , the late Lord Leverhulme , who started the rebuilding work on the replica castle in 1912 .
26 In a way , the show marks the next step on from the post-industrial carnivals that have been developed over the past ten years .
27 The show marks the reopening of the Palace of Holyroodhouse after the European Summit in December .
28 The turn of the century marks the real change in Freud 's work , which had been developing from 1895 through his self-analysis .
29 He argues that the depression marks the exhaustion of firms ' ability to obtain profits from the last generation of innovations and their low profit rates force them to take radical steps .
30 Despite its low circulation ( hovering around 380,000 in mid-1988 ) , the Independent marks the furthest point away from the description of the political press in the 19th century with which this discussion began .
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