Example sentences of "[vb pp] publicly [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 16–7- Duncan McGilvray , a Deacon , who had been seen publicly in a state of intoxication was ordered to be publicly rebuked .
2 It is preferable if the tenders are opened publicly with the tenderers given the opportunity of being present , so that fair play can be clearly seen to have taken place .
3 Picasso had never shown publicly at the big Salons , but Braque 's Cubist works exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants of 1909 were widely discussed and were undoubtedly an influence on some painters , while they must have helped others to interpret Cézanne in a more intellectual , objective way .
4 ‘ I think the draw had already been done [ before being ] shown publicly for the benefit of television , ’ he said .
5 These proposals were first aired publicly by the French government at the annual meeting of the IMF in September 1964 .
6 Little is known publicly about the effects of the air raids on supply lines and ground troops , except that Iraq 's anti-aircraft guns and missiles have continued to fire .
7 But its present leader , Mikhail Gorbachev , has spoken publicly about the importance of introducing democracy into the area of production :
8 It is the first time Mr and Mrs Bulger have spoken publicly since the death of their twoyear-old son in February .
9 THE policeman whose hand was sewn back on after it was horrifically severed by a Samurai sword has spoken publicly for the first time of his ordeal .
10 THE PARENTS of murdered toddler Jamie Bulger have spoken publicly for the first time about their tragedy and their new hopes for the birth of another child .
11 THE parents of toddler James Bulger have spoken publicly for the first time since their son 's tragic death in February .
12 These were acknowledged publicly by no less a figure than a former Prime Minister , W.L. MacKenzie King , at the communal celebrations of Lyon 's 60th birthday and his 35th anniversary of engagement in social interests , as well as those of his friend of many years ( to whom Lyon Cohen had diverted the honour of being invited to be the Member of Parliament several years before ) , Sir Samuel W. Jacobs , KC : ‘ Our friend finds himself today , ’ , commented Jacobs , ‘ the acknowledged leader of Jewry in Canada , a position acquired by years of self-denying effort … respected by his own , and also by the larger community in which we dwell . ’
13 On March 17 he had apologised publicly to the " victims of deplorable and regrettable incidents " under his regime , stating that he now had " a profound , sincere and irreversible " commitment to reform .
14 Being convicted involves being identified publicly as a criminal , and it is in this context that we can say that being found guilty is the same as being guilty .
15 There is some evidence that he was involved in the negotiations for property , and he certainly became associated publicly with the great success of the firm .
16 Nevertheless , the issue was discussed publicly in the winter of 1936 – 37 , when Carlist and Falangist newspapers published articles about it in December 1936 and January 1937 .
17 The political turn was signalled publicly in an address given by Bukharin at a memorial meeting on the fifth anniversary of the death of Lenin on 21 January 1929 .
18 The White Paper also recognized publicly for the first time a stark fact that was becoming increasingly obvious : that with the steep decline in the birth rate the number of teachers in training would have to be sharply reduced to avoid a gross overproduction of teachers .
19 Assad 's message had been endorsed publicly by the Libyan leader Col. Kadhafi as showing " unmistakable pan-Arab commitment " ; Assad as well as President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and the Sudanese leader Gen. Bashir had met with Kadhafi at Misratah in Libya on Jan. 3 .
20 Failure to disperse after it has been read publicly by a magistrate or other official may render an offender liable to imprisonment .
21 The government 's position on the structure of higher education was articulated publicly for the first time by Crosland in his famous speech at Woolwich Polytechnic in 1965 , in which he declared the government 's acceptance of the need for a ‘ system based on the twin traditions which have created our present higher institutions ’ .
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