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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Sunbathers can easily find isolation in the sand dunes and no amount of tourists could fill the beach to Benidorm standards .
2 This must help to make up for her disappointment in the Cowal Championships when , due to an error in the markings , she missed out on a fourth place medal .
3 It is hoped that this meagre expedition into social history may provide at least some indication of the extent to which each decade has bred people of differing outlook on sexuality and an indication of the way in which different styles of upbringing and ways of social thinking in the childhood years of successive decades might be expected to affect the outlook and tolerance of adults throughout the varying age groups of society .
4 The amount of grief in the Cottenham Maidens last Saturday was mainly caused by a combination of large fields and an injudicious pace , and once again gives rise to concern that the safety factor on most courses is far too high .
5 A RAW DEAL IN THE ROMP STAKES
6 But if manufacturers were to try too hard to come up with new ideas we 'd be constantly faced with designs to rival Gibson 's semi-mythical Moderne and Burns ' Flyte in the grossness stakes .
7 He was a leading light in the Cinematograph Exhibitors ' Association and expanded his business by acquiring and developing a chain of cinemas — which he named Vogue — in places like Govan , Rutherglen and Shettleston .
8 There can be no doubt about the need for urban regeneration in the Cardiff docklands .
9 The reasoning in the lawyer/client cases can not automatically be transferred to the financial services area because of the particular nature of the lawyer/client relationship including the fact that in order to prove a breach of confidence a client might be forced to forfeit the lawyer/client privilege , and that the very restrictive Law Society rules provide for only a very limited role for the Chinese wall where law firms amalgamate and the clients consent .
10 Otherwise unemployed people constitute an important seasonal labour force in the holiday camps sector .
11 To be developed " along appropriate lines and in such a way as to take into account the legal provisions , contractual agreements and practices in force in the member states . "
12 But so far neither has shown the tremendous flair with top-spin attacking that made them a major force in the world championships in Dortmund only seven months ago .
13 A rigorous Porter-style analysis seems to be a more important ingredient in the decision inputs .
14 The year after I joined , I attended the party and drank several pints of a mixture of lager and gin , after which I lost consciousness in the changing rooms ; I woke up to find myself being hit , kicked and pushed down the stairs .
15 Football in the Square gardens
16 For example : Sentence Graphics 1 John gets up Stick figure in bed then standing by bed 2 John gets dressed Clothes appear on stick figure 3 John eats breakfast food on breakfast table disappears 4 John gets the bus to Stick figure leaves house , school waits at bus stop , is collected by bus 5 He plays football in the Stick boys play football yard Example 4 : parts of speech .
17 We tried football in the exercise periods , but soon developed a more entertaining and satisfying game , a variation on volleyball .
18 when you look at the massive investment in the Channel Tunnel rail system , private sector for the tunnel and massive public sector investment in the rail facilities and depots around the country — that 's the balanced long-term future we must have .
19 It can , however , be claimed that though the expansion of employment in the public sector was not directly responsible for the decline in the number of people employed in the manufacturing sector because it did not use the same labour sources and because there was no labour shortage anyhow , it was , nevertheless , indirectly responsible because it led to a decline in private profit and hence to a shortage of capital for investment in the manufacturing industries .
20 Investment in The Melrose Partnerships , which are active in the acquisition of productive US oil and gas wells , can bring valuable income tax and CGT reliefs .
21 In his speech , De Michelis urged EC countries to devote at least 0.25 per cent of their gross national product ( GNP ) towards investment in the Maghreb countries where demographic pressures were rendering them vulnerable to the forces of Islamic fundamentalism and encouraging mass migration to Europe .
22 The fact that these values were linked with a conspicuous material investment in the library premises clearly corresponded to one criterion which the Coordinating Team took into account ; namely , that a school is not only interested in developing heuristic pedagogies but also willing to put some money and energy into the library as the appropriate central facility .
23 Capital was needed on an unprecedented scale to satisfy the opportunities for investment in the coal mines and , more importantly , in the means of transporting coal .
24 Here he applied his supreme skills in detailed mapping , and his knowledge of Alpine structures and metamorphic rocks , to provide the basic solution to the controversy on the structure and rock succession in the north-west Highlands of Scotland .
25 Their objections are on the same basis as ours — it is dangerous to have no independent screen between the state and the defendant in the Crown Courts .
26 The defendant in the Protector Alarms case was a Scottish company but it had a place of business in England at which service could be effected .
27 The LDP 's unending grip on power seemed threatened by a collapse in the opinion polls .
28 Recent work has involved the incorporation of divorce and remarriage in the simulation routines , and on implementation of the latter for micro-computers .
29 He is now facing a similar allegation in a £100,000 damages action raised against him by Mr Mullan 's widow and three teenage children .
30 Unfortunately , this means almost no mention in the book columns of the serious press .
  Next page