Example sentences of "[adj] to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Stratimirović tried to prevent Vuk from publishing his grammar by invoking an order of Leopold II giving a monopoly to the publishing of books in Serbian to the Serbian press in Buda , which , unlike that in Vienna , was under the influence of the Church .
2 Reminders of all the matters to be dealt with on behalf of a buyer before completion are itemised on the pre-completion agenda ( p226 ) with any items added that are peculiar to a particular transaction .
3 These orders relate partly to training , partly to rights of audience in different courts , and partly to matters peculiar to the internal regulation of the Inns and the dress , appearance and deportment of their members .
4 The importance of empirical material from anthropological research , and from the analyst 's research work in therapeutic encounters , is not the relatively superficial one of seeking to explain the actions of people who act in ways which appear as strange and peculiar to the ordinary members of modern Western societies .
5 One obvious problem is whether social representations are peculiar to the modern age , or indeed to scientific thinking , or whether they appeared previously .
6 A Formalist/Prague School approach thus necessarily projects back onto earlier literature the aesthetic standards peculiar to the modern age .
7 There will be additional checks , peculiar to the individual aircraft flow and you will need to incorporate these into the standard checks .
8 But in a modern text such as Thru which mimics the classical narrator in order to counter classical conceptions of subjectivity and narrative voice , the narrator undergoes the effects of ‘ fading ’ peculiar to the traditional novel as well .
9 The latter document should , of course , contain any provisions which may be peculiar to the new partner , especially as regards clarification of his status in the firm , his involvement in the decision making process and the precise extent of liabilities which he is required to undertake or against which he will be entitled to an indemnity ( see below ) .
10 For the time being , and probably for the foreseeable future , the rather vague criterion remains that of ‘ episcopal ordination ’ , vague because that procedure is not peculiar to the Anglican Church .
11 Such fissures were by no means peculiar to the middle classes of the Russian Empire : analogous divisions can be found throughout Europe .
12 It is not something peculiar to the Royal Family — people have very humdrum existences and the Royals provide a bit of excitement .
13 He goes on to point out that words like ‘ comfort ’ and ‘ home ’ are peculiar to the English language , so that the benighted French are driven to borrow confortable , since de la maison and chez nous relate merely to eating and sleeping places .
14 The second involves the juxtaposition of two consonants not usually placed together in an attempt to reproduce a sound peculiar to the original language ( e.g. , the " kh " sound in Bakhtiari or Bakhshaish ) ; the two consonants used in this way may vary , or one of them may be left out altogether .
15 Early morning and afternoon game drives , where you will see most of the common species of African wildlife , together with those peculiar to the northern province .
16 The other is to make meaning central and to construct a scientific method peculiar to the social world .
17 It 's not common practice to register notice of a contract in all cases , but when , for example , there 's an unusually long deferred completion date , or when your buyer-client suspects the good faith of the seller , or if there is a contract by correspondence , or for any other special reason peculiar to the particular transaction , a Notice should be seriously considered and the client consulted and advised .
18 As always , it is necessary to know the range of applicability of any measurement — whether it is relevant to other similar flows or whether it is peculiar to the particular situation investigated .
19 Nevertheless , there are features peculiar to the computational approach that have important implications for physiological psychologists and these are the topic of this section .
20 The conventions of impermanence , where the cat breaks all its teeth or has all its hair burned off or is squashed flat and , the next moment , becomes whole again , seem to be peculiar to the comic strip and the animated cartoon .
21 Secret diplomacy , bribery , the interception of correspondence — none of these was in any way peculiar to the eighteenth century .
22 It requires special gifts of insight and patience to move from a mono-cultural to a cross-cultural perspective .
23 This includes personal " tics " , ways of moving one 's head , habits such as nail-biting , which are peculiar to individuals and not generalisable to the whole group .
24 Others , like the noxious Eurasian water milfoil ( Myriophyllum spp ) enjoy anything from freshwater to a brackish cocktail of 33 per cent sea water .
25 Let's say I was prone to a certain amount of raffishness which would have been frowned upon by my more sober colleagues .
26 Obsession is easily diverted , and an all-consuming passion for your lover can shift almost transparently to one for your child , making your partner vaguely uneasy and prone to a curious sense of loss .
27 Some plants are prone to a particular disease or pest : .
28 As a result both were prone to a disastrous application of metaphysical cultural values to political analysis — in the case of Chesterton and his role as a drama critic and provincial journalist in the 1920s , to a vision of cultural despair based on a parallel theory of criticism to that of his friend the Shakespearian scholar , G. Wilson Knight .
29 Amis 's novels have always been full of opinions , and have , I think , become prone to a marked ambiguity of effect , especially with regard to questions of gender and race .
30 But , like all professionals , Fisher is prone to the odd upset .
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