Example sentences of "round [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I sit there for a bit longer , till I finish my coffee , then I decide to go out and have a look round the station .
2 We had started off in grand style , rattling right round the station plaza with a great tooting of horns .
3 For a couple of days now Luke had trailed her round the station , sat in her office , watched her through the glass partition of the control-room as she 'd done her interviews : everywhere she had turned , he 'd been there , and she could n't take much more .
4 They 're all round the window .
5 They could see Mr Flood fussing round the window of his shop as if he were still worried about what they could have found so amusing in its contents .
6 If signs start going up we 'll have wrought-iron railings and flowerpots round the trip points next .
7 And wrapped it round the Hollies new LP
8 ‘ You 're safe now — only another step or two ! ’ they heard Chuck call out , and within a few seconds they were both thankfully flinging their arms round the firm , strongly rooted trunks of the saplings on the ridge .
9 Yeah , you have n't mentioned going round the brewery there then ?
10 None was more famous or strange than the notorious Victory Arch ; and in his latest book , THE MONUMENT * , Samir al-Khalil weaves round the arch a fascinating and thoughtful study of totalitarianism and art .
11 When the draught 's okay the flame gets drawn over the bag-wall at the back of the firebox , then it sweeps round the arch of the kiln-chamber , down through the pots into the throat and out up the chimney .
12 Another instance of this is seen in later examples of Imperial building where the entablature is continued round the arch or where free-standing columns ( generally in interiors ) possess their own entablature , often surmounted by a sculptured figure .
13 Traditionally , African beer is drunk from a large cup , passed round the groups of drinkers , but in this village they had a different technique : they brewed the stuff in an old oil drum and served it up in buckets .
14 There was a sort of host who dished out the sherry and took each new arrival round the groups ; though as there were quite a lot of us he could n't remember all our names so we were forced to say them .
15 The air was sweet with incense which wafted round the marble high altar like the spirits of the blessed .
16 And there were more when , laden with flowers , she went round the Guinness Trust Estate .
17 Melissa glanced down at the powerful fingers with the powdering of sawdust round the nails and then up into the fierce black eyes , and her heart began to thump .
18 ‘ He 's gone round the pubs to look for you . ’
19 And I used to take 'em round the pubs and put 'em up for raffles for Christmas .
20 What you doing here then , nice boy like you , hanging round the pubs ?
21 The number of teams more than doubled as word spread round the pubs , and £120 was raised through sponsorship for charity .
22 Erm he goes round the pubs and he agitates on these lads .
23 Sometimes when I was n't in training , he and I would spend the evening round the pubs , carry bottles home , listen to music and talk till four .
24 The pilot would then be required to taxi round and round the launcher , gradually increasing speed .
25 It is believed that the UDA could now change its name in a bid to get round the law .
26 Many landlords try to get round the law by letting under one of these headings because of the degree of control they can exercise over the duration of the tenancy and over individual tenants .
27 What has failed to attract attention , however , is the fact that there is a third possible response — avoidance , using legal methods to get round the law .
28 The British Crime Survey of 1983 , a research project carried out by the Home Office , is a recent example of how victim and self-report studies can be used to attempt to get round the problems of and deficiencies with the official criminal statistics .
29 To get round the problems of securing a satisfactory comms link out in the sticks , multinationals are acquiring VSAT links , provided by the local PTT or anyone else that can obtain licensing .
30 To some extent we are able to get round the problems of localizing lesion sites by using modem imaging techniques like NMR ( nuclear magnetic resonance ) and CAT ( computerized axial tomography ) scanning ( Carlson 1986 ) .
  Next page