Example sentences of "[that] [noun] [verb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | We may doubt that Beerbohm had the acumen or the catholicity to respond to this provocation as conclusively as he should . |
2 | When his father realised that Christian had no intention of returning to the family estate in Oxfordshire , and breeding prime Herefordshire cattle for the rest of his life , he gave him a small capital sum and washed his hands of him . |
3 | Always fake : publishing executives have no interest in fashion and , if pushed , would venture that Gucci opens the batting for England . |
4 | Carver knew for a fact that Hauser had a collection of Roosevelt film clips , that he studied them to perfect the famous American president 's mannerisms . |
5 | It is interesting that Cairns saw the pressure for ministers to run for office coming , not from ambitious ministers , but from party activists who thought that certain ministers would make good political leaders . |
6 | However , in what follows we shall assume that Lucas estimated the equivalent of equation ( 6.5 ) . |
7 | It was quite a performance that Twomey gave every evening . |
8 | Glaxo has not produced any data about the effect of ranitidine on rats using Astra 's methods , but says there is no evidence that ranitidine promotes the formation of dangerous levels of gastrin at therapeutic doses . |
9 | From this it followed , among other things , that molecules had a shape in three-dimensional space , and the brilliant German chemist Kekule ( 1829–96 ) , in the very Victorian situation of a passenger sitting on top of a London bus in 1865 , imagined the first of the complex structural molecular models , the famous benzene ring of six carbon atoms to each of which a hydrogen atom was attached . |
10 | The important thing here is to look at the nature of the evidence , which is opinion and hearsay — that MacDonald favoured the idea , and had re-aligned his own political thinking . |
11 | The second possibility that Nikolaev committed the murder under the guidance of the NKVD seems to be more likely that the first possibility because so many people seem to have conveniently neglected their duties but I still think that it is not the most likely . |
12 | Furthermore , absence of pain during cutting ( see below ) raises the possibility that endorphins have a role in the phenomenon . |
13 | The point here is that institutions define the discourses and narratives through which aesthetic experience is received . |
14 | Our courts have refused to consider the validity of an Act of Parliament either on the ground that Parliament had no power to pass it or on the ground that the statute had been improperly passed . |
15 | If a minister clearly states the effect of a provision and there is no subsequent relevant amendment to the Bill or withdrawal of the statement it is reasonable to assume that Parliament passed the Bill on the basis that the provision would have the effect stated . |
16 | In my judgment there can be no doubt that , if Parliamentary privilege does not prohibit references to Hansard , the Parliamentary history shows that Parliament passed the legislation on the basis that the effect of sections 61 and 63 of the Act was to assess in-house benefits , and particularly concessionary education for teachers ' children , on the marginal cost to the employer and not on the average cost . |
17 | The traditional view is that Parliament has no power to bind its successors either as to the manner or as to the form of subsequent legislation . |
18 | But Lord Donaldson said he did not interpret the power in the 1981 Broadcasting Act to mean that Parliament intended the home secretary to have authority either covertly to censor programmes or to require the broadcasting authorities to present news programmes other than with due impartiality and accuracy . |
19 | If the body exercising the power has been established especially for that purpose , the courts are likely to conclude that Parliament intended the body to act personally . |
20 | It is difficult to think that Parliament intended the section to operate so capriciously and I would not construe it in that sense unless clearly constrained to do so by the statutory language . |
21 | But he was surprised that Holmes had no luggage and that he appeared so unexpectedly . |
22 | Thunder rolled over and round them from every direction so that Trent had the sense of being in the interior of an enormous drum on which giants beat from all sides . |
23 | Suddenly I remember that Lucker has no knowledge of my busted story . |
24 | One hopes that reading it may have good effects , of the kind described by Wordsworth in the 1800 Preface , or more succinctly summed up by Lewis in the conclusion to An Experiment in Criticism , where he says that literature heals the wound without undermining the privilege of individuality . |
25 | One can compare the passage just quoted , which insists on the unknowability of the real world , with some of her subsequent remarks ; as , for instance , when she refers to her argument ‘ that literature represents the myths and imaginary versions of real social relationships ’ , and claims that ‘ a form of criticism which refuses to reproduce the pseudo-knowledge offered by the text provides a real knowledge of the work of literature ’ , or says that ‘ the task of criticism , then , is … to produce a real knowledge of history . ’ |
26 | The way that ideology serves the interests of the ruling class , by obscuring the contradictions in the lived relations of the mode of production , is through the generation of ideas and explanations — knowledge . |
27 | All went to plan , until he was delayed by a revolution in Venezuela , the consequences of which were that Stewart missed the replay which Casuals lost 4–1 . |
28 | Whether it was the power of Haston 's argument or of his boot , the result was that Healy joined the Workers ' International League . |
29 | Mr Smith started to give him new clothes but soon realized that William had no wish to be clean , as on the next visit the new suit would be filthy . |
30 | The main one was that Kenneth wanted no time between speeches . |