Example sentences of "[prep] the national [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 Two weeks after the publication of proposals for the National Curriculum in September 1987 , the Times Educational Supplement invited 13 curriculum pundits to give their views .
2 An urgent need in the 1990s is for this professionalism to gain control of all classrooms , in order for the National Curriculum in English to be properly implemented .
3 And in that figure I 've just given you we have allowed for extra provision in some cases like for the national curriculum in the education sector , additional spending for under fives and taking on board the requirements in Social Services for care in the community and the children 's bill , although those have been , of course — the care in the community proposals have now been delayed and they are being phased in over three years .
4 The programme for the National Certificate in Travel is detailed below :
5 His production of Mrs Warren 's Profession for the National Theatre in 1971 steered cunningly clear of melodrama ; his Much Ado About Nothing for the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1971 featured white parasols and sun-dappled lawns that seemed to evoke the world of Turgenev .
6 Mrs Klein was Nicholas Wright 's first play for the National Theatre in 1988 .
7 Since then several major houses have been secured for the National Trust in this way , notably Belton , Calke and Kedleston .
8 He then went to South Africa with the FA summer touring side and played for the national team in one of the representative games .
9 In particular , I wish you well for the National Conference in March to which you will be rushing immediately after our meeting with the SMT on March 8th .
10 There is limited choice for the national advertiser in cinema — 60 seconds is more or less standard , though 30-second spots are used ; in magazines full pages , DPSs , halves and quarters ; in newspapers full pages , and , depending on whether the paper is broadsheet or tabloid , 35 cm × 6 , 25 cm × 4 , 15 cm × 2 are very widely used sizes : on TV , 30-second spots dominate , with 20-second and 10-second spots becoming more popular ; in posters , 4-sheets are still most common .
11 In general , roses have played a part in everyday life from the time of the ancient Egyptians and Chinese , and have always been loved and treated with veneration , and repeatedly illustrated in herbals and paintings , they were adopted as the national flower in Britain from the Middle Ages .
12 On the rates charged by the ECGD , my hon. Friend will be aware that it is necessary to strike a balance between the national interest in providing ECGD cover for capital goods exports and the interest of the taxpayer that that should not prove to be too expensive .
13 A package of laws redefining local government structure , responsibilities and powers and the electoral system had been rushed through the National Assembly in recent weeks .
14 And , since the King had played some part in securing the formation of the National Government in August , the election would , in a sense , validate the King 's action as well , ‘ Of course you are going to vote , ’ the King said to Sir Maurice Hankey , the Cabinet Secretary , on 2 October , before the Cabinet had alighted upon the doctor 's mandate formula which made the election possible .
15 So while you can talk about the expansion of federal powers and the dominance of the national government in certain areas , it is but nothing compared to the dominance of central government in Britain over , over local government .
16 At a state banquet on the eve of the national day in the Great Hall of the People , the head tables were cluttered with ageing revolutionaries slumped in their seats .
17 In Britain , however , English has functioned to provide a substitute for any " theory " of the national life in the form of an imponderable base from which the quality of the national life can be assessed .
18 The provisions , discussed more fully below , allowing a departure from all or part of the National Curriculum in certain cases or where certain individuals are concerned , were introduced when the bill was before the Commons in early 1988 .
19 That development work or experiments which involve modification of the national curriculum in a school will require the approval of the Secretary of State may well serve to inhibit some forms of school-based curriculum innovation .
20 The implementation of the National Curriculum in the nineties will lead to an extension of that broad span of ability up the age range .
21 Far from being on the shelf , the school library is playing a central role in the delivery of the national curriculum in secondary schools — actively used by teachers , an asset for the school and a haven of pastoral support for students .
22 Implementation of the national curriculum in clusters of small rural schools
23 As things stand , they are required to balance their own views , the local authority 's policy , the head 's guidance and the imperatives of the national curriculum in their school 's curriculum statement .
24 The latter was the president of the National Trust in Northern Ireland and she had met him when helping with its work .
25 In a letter to Peter Brooke , Secretary of State at the Department of National Heritage , the Council for the protection of Rural England and the Council for British Archaeology have joined their voices to that of the National Trust in calling for a public review of the new strategy .
26 A study of the national question in Georgia must incorporate an analysis of indigenous social and economic developments ( extra-political factors such as urbanisation , demographic changes and industrialisation ) as well as government policy implemented by the centre .
27 The director of the National Museum in Poznan , Professor Konstanty Kalinowski , has agreed to return all his pictures and furniture held by the museum .
28 At the conference , the Director of the National Museum in Phnom Penh , Pich Keo , asked Unesco to pass information on stolen property to Interpol and the International Council of Museums , and made a plea to museum directors to research the provenance of objects in their collections , and to return those illegally exported from Cambodia .
29 Thus , the effects of taxation may be seen only in future periods , as where they affect the accumulation of capital ( see the discussion of the national debt in the previous Lecture ) .
30 Dr Eliska Fucikova of the National Gallery in Prague describes the painting as one of the artist 's finest works , comparable with the ‘ Bacchus , Ceres and Amor ’ in the Kunsthistorisches Museum , Vienna .
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