Example sentences of "[noun pl] [adv] in [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Our education programme changes attitudes slowly in an environment where selfish values grow even faster . |
2 | Cos a I I 've got the contracts right in the Body Shop , we got Karen she used to work in Superdrug , and she came in there the other day and I 'm saying , och , do you know Michelle ? |
3 | I get to my feet and go over to the window , easing back the soft material , looking at the houses opposite in the half-light . |
4 | The latest move from the forces of oppression is to restrict mountain bikes to surface roads only in the New Forest ( where at least some of the riders will doubtless be subject to severe injury and death from motor vehicles ) . |
5 | Anti-communism thus united the interests of the US Occupation , the Japanese state and private employers especially in the face of a united front of public and private sector workers . |
6 | Sistem is initially targeted at customer support Hot Lines and internal Help Desks much in the fashion of start-ups Aurum and ProActive Software . |
7 | He scores more goals , is a better passer , a better tackler , 100 times better in the air — but most of all , he has a decent haircut . |
8 | It 's no use going on a six day trail ride , with six hours daily in the saddle , if all you want is some gentle hacking in a scenic setting , with perhaps a few longer pub rides as an added bonus . |
9 | Just 20 minutes daily in the privacy of your home will develop an amazing physique . |
10 | Incubation is by the male birds only in the cases of Emus and Rheas . |
11 | In McMurdo Sound , Antarctica , Tedrow and Ugolini ( 1966 ) and Tedrow ( 1977 ) estimated that shifts of 30–40°C occurred several times daily in the surface of rocks under summer sunshine , and Nichols and Ball ( 1964 ) found bare ahumic soils passing through the freeze-thaw cycle over a hundred times in the course of a summer . |
12 | You could begin your essay by acknowledging this and continue to work with the definitions throughout the essay , relating the different definitions together in the conclusion . |
13 | At first he could hear nothing but the dripping of rainwater from the trees and the singing of birds deeper in the forest . |
14 | The signatures of these ‘ partner equivalents ’ would serve to document the individuals ' responsibility for the examination ; to that extent it eliminates for the outside world the element of anonymity currently inherent in the practice of signing audit opinions only in the names of the firms . |
15 | Cricket in the 20th century has pulled in large crowds only in the aftermath of the two world wars ; after such horrors , people needed the spiritual balm of this most philosophic of games . |
16 | The Persian empire made and used coins only in the part of its territory which adjoined the coin-using lands of Greece . |
17 | Looking her potential clients right in the eye , she would say : Women buy your products , why not have women help you publicise them — women understand women " . |
18 | Lizards of course became birds — some as unearthly as the Greater Bird of Paradise , and others , like the Cassowary , which reversed tactics somewhere in the past and returned to the earth again . |
19 | We can assume that most of the migrants were not in fact speakers of the basilect alone , but commanded a range of styles somewhere in the middle of the continuum . |
20 | The fourth category is the strong nuclear force , which holds the quarks together in the proton and neutron , and holds the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus of an atom . |
21 | She turned her face to the fire , gripped her hands upon her elbows , and drew her thin shoulders together in a shrug . |
22 | Always aim to look first one way and then the other , move both head and shoulders together in the direction in which you want to look ; avoid turning the head . |
23 | His three sons are cathedral choristers : ‘ There have n't been three brothers together in the choir for about 12 years , ’ he says , with some pride . |
24 | They formed a strand in the cultural tradition which drew the different peoples together in the formation of the Yugoslav Movement of the early nineteenth century . |
25 | A set of syntagmatic relations can be based on the results of putting grammatically appropriate lexical units together in a construction ( all the lexical units standing in a particular syntagmatic relation to another lexical unit are , of course , specific to particular constructions , or sets of constructions ) . |
26 | To eyes long in the dark , it was as daylight . |
27 | We 've got stores in the Arctic Circle , we 've got shops literally in the desert in the Middle East and we 've got them in Hong Kong and Singapore and they 're all the same — and they all work . |
28 | To this the tiger agreed , and having tied their tails together in a reef knot , the pair set off arm in arm . |
29 | ‘ And take baths together in the candlelight ? ’ |
30 | A spokesman for Dr Clarke said : ‘ We are official candidates so in a democracy we have as much right to appear as the others . ’ |