Example sentences of "[noun pl] of [art] children [unc] " in BNC.

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1 John Murray , Robert Kindley and John Parry were moved by TV pictures of the children 's plight .
2 Cortot found greater depth in later recordings of the Children 's Corner suite although there are rich compensations in the finespun elegance of his ‘ Doctor Gradus ’ and his stylish response to Debussy 's mockery of Wagner 's chromatic solemnity in the ‘ Golliwog 's cakewalk ’ .
3 ‘ I know , ’ he stressed ‘ that within the rules of the Children 's Hearing , that the best interests of the children have been weighed , and on the balance of probabilities , the appropriate action was the right action .
4 ‘ Here I Am ’ has taken into account the development of the National Curriculum and aims to ensure that the quality of Religious Education is as challenging and demanding as other areas of the children 's learning .
5 A doctor told my parents of a children 's holiday scheme in Switzerland .
6 And when you sat , trembling forgetfully , on one of the benches in the frosted gardens , with the grass like white hair standing on end , you felt you could hear the ghosts of the children 's cries and shouts — for here they must surely have played in their packs .
7 However , others have been content to accept the message in Problems of Social Policy : for example , Peter Gosden , in his detailed study of education in the war , cites Titmuss as the authoritative source on the social consequences of evacuation ; likewise , Raynes Minns concludes that the revelations of the children 's condition ‘ made headlines , and once again , as in 1914 , when the physical condition of army recruits was found to be so poor , war forced a British government to recognise the extremes of poverty and neglect that survived in our cities , and eventually to act by expanding our welfare services ’ .
8 The current project will involve a detailed audit of the data held on magnetic tapes collected during the first ten years of the children 's lives .
9 And this ‘ vague altruism ’ apparently permeated up to the highest levels in government : for example , Neville Chamberlain , who had been a leading figure in the pre-war National Government 's denial of the problem of child malnutrition , was so shocked by the stories of the children 's condition that he commented to his sister , ‘ I never knew that such conditions existed , and I feel ashamed of having been so ignorant of my neighbours .
10 The conditions of the children 's home life tended to nullify the efforts of the teacher to instil a little culture …
11 Chrissy Allott , Catherine Snelling and Nick Spokes of Fullwell Cross Library in Ilford , Essex , have written to me in response to Brough Girling 's recent call for suggestions as to what might have happened in grown-up life to the heroes and heroines of the children 's books of our youth .
12 I was keeping a glass of chablis company the other day with Jonathan Hayden and Fiona Brownlee from Pavilion Books , and we got talking about what might have happened in grown-up life to the heroes and heroines of the children 's books of our youth .
13 The interviews with the class teachers centre on their parent involvement and multi-cultural practices and their assessments of the children 's behaviour and achievement .
14 The results of these tests were correlated with details of the children 's home backgrounds .
15 For instance , first-school classrooms with colourful montages of the children 's own work and collections of objects that are interesting to touch and fun to look at provide a stimulating background for pupils whether they have defective vision or not .
16 There are some ministers who eschew the delights of the children 's address .
17 It is the members of a Children 's Hearing who will decide whether your child can return to live with you .
18 The current members of the Children 's Book Circle committee , from left Sara Domville ( Reed ) , Mark Hutchinson ( Gollancz ) , Suzanne Carnell ( Penguin ) , David Morton ( HarperCollins ) , Liz Comstock-Smith ( literary agent ) , Anne Sarrag ( Book Bus ) , Francesca Dow ( Orchard ) , and Clarissa Cridland ( Pan Macmillan ) .
19 Coffee morning : Everyone is welcome to the village hall on Wednesday at 10am for a coffee morning held by members of the Children 's Society .
20 The windows were like the windows of the children 's ward where Baby used to be , of white glass which you could n't see through .
21 They began to realise that many procedures had been wrongly carried out in the management of the case , in particular that the Social Work Department were not implementing the decisions of the Children 's Panel .
22 Mrs Laughton said that one of the reasons for Mrs Kemp 's suspension was that she had objected to the Social Work Department ignoring the decisions of the Children 's panel .
23 to give examples of the children 's own work as cumulative examples of achievements
24 People who have helped could also be invited into the school at the end of the project to see the results of the children 's work .
25 The main source of data is maternal diary records of the children 's language development .
26 The review team , set up under the auspices of the Social Services Committee , included councillors , senior departmental management and representatives of the children 's day centre organisers and under-fives social workers in its membership .
27 Children 's publishers are invited to an open meeting to discuss this year 's Children 's Book Week with representatives of the Children 's Book Foundation and the Daily Telegraph from 12 to 3 p.m. on Friday 29th January at the Publishers Association , , .
28 If the expenses of the children 's education are more than you can contrive , I will help with that if you inform me by letter .
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