Example sentences of "[adv prt] in [art] next [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 We heard them settling down in the next room which until then had been empty .
2 The PACE Day Centre near Aylesbury has been using the technique for the last 3 years , but it could all be over in the next couple of days .
3 Over in the next valley to the west lies the great park and lost house of Frampton Court , the home of the beneficent Browne family who were responsible for the building of Forston Manor .
4 ‘ I want to think about it and will probably make my mind up in the next day or two . ’
5 The inspector was pleased to receive that , noting the fact that we had a , a drop in our work output but expected that , that would go up in the next year or two .
6 Coming up in the next issue — details of our latest recruit — Watch this space !
7 This is one aspect that art historian and critic Deborah Cherry will be taking up in the next issue .
8 I said well I 'm gon na come up in the next hour and I wan na
9 This theme will be taken up in the next section .
10 Finally , it is possible that tighter control of restrictive practices agreements between firms is one of the factors that provide an incentive for mergers , a subject we take up in the next section .
11 Er but I do n't believe it 's worthwhile doing manual on the cases , they will get picked up in the next data support run which runs two weeks afterwards , that 'll be erm beginning of May .
12 These matters are taken up in the next chapter .
13 This issue is taken up in the next chapter where some of the rules of company law that support the functioning of the market are examined .
14 This we take up in the next chapter .
15 As most of these zones are in Third World countries , these issues will be taken up in the next chapter .
16 Faced with a new branch of nationwide chain opening up in the next street leading to falling sales at one 's own bookshop , a bookseller might go for interviews with customers leaving the new store .
17 The story is taken up in the next extract :
18 The 1993 event started in York on 14 February and we will report on how they got on in the next issue .
19 That will give us plenty to work on in the next decade , and that is probably as far as we should look for the time being .
20 Swing , he screamed at himself as his arms crashed into the pine , not holding , but the weight of his body already carrying him on in the next arc of his trajectory .
21 By the time he got to the ice-cream he was too weary to eat , so he downed the bourbon — which instantly took its toll — and retired to bed , leaving the television on in the next room , its sound turned down to a soporific burble .
22 But as the party rages on in the next office , a private little film show of Brenda 's holiday slides starts to throw lights on some dark secrets .
23 ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) .
24 Clive Barker ( 1977 ) of Warwick University has given new substance to the use of games in the training of actors and Brian Watkins ( 1981 ) has evolved a theoretical framework conceptually linking drama and game in a way which I shall attempt to build on in the next chapter .
25 The work of the courts is touched on in the next chapter .
26 This section looks at the range of techniques you can choose from before we move on in the next chapter to examine different ways video can be related to the rest of the language programme .
27 Van Gelder said : ‘ Makes it a bit awkward , sir , does n't it , if war breaks out in the next half-hour ? ’
28 ‘ If Sir Henry does n't come out in the next quarter of an hour , the path will be covered by the fog .
29 If you are satisfied that you have glued everything well , you can then proceed with the framing as set out in the next chapter .
30 Insert needle again in the lower stitch and bring it out in the next stitch to the left ( Fig. 2 ) .
  Next page