Example sentences of "[that] [adv] [art] [noun] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 The catalogue recalls that in 1938 Brame and Lorenceau held an exhibition of Rousseau 's work which contributed to the revival of interest in that artist 's work , and goes on to express the hope that eventually a museum devoted to Barbizon painting may be set up .
2 Each additional storey may be given its own roof so that eventually the building looks like a Chinese pagoda .
3 While he realises that there will always be problems in trying to teach anyone a new subject , Reas admits that it was sad to see a keen student being teased by his less keen classmates , but felt hopeful that perhaps a seed had been planted that one day would grow .
4 The closest they got to an opinion on the two campaigns was when Andrew said that Labour 's campaign organisers had been ‘ more laid back ’ than the Tories , but his brother immediately disagreed , saying that perhaps the Conservatives had shown more flexibility in their poster plans .
5 You see , there is word in the bazaar that perhaps the man heard beforehand that the Parquet were coming .
6 Both Noah and Forget also offered the suggestion that perhaps the Americans had been caught napping because they were over confident .
7 At the very least , a Channel 5 might convince the Government that perhaps the BBC does not need to take advertising just yet .
8 Let me suggest to my hon. and learned Friend the Minister that perhaps the time has come to stop acting as an honest broker between victim and aggressor .
9 If there 's no control at home , they come to the teacher and require the teacher to discipline their child , in the hope or belief that perhaps the teacher has the desired authority .
10 Suggest that perhaps the meeting reconvene in half an hour after studying the material .
11 Information collected about the relatives of cancer patients showed that only a minority have anything more than superficial contact with the staff caring for the patient , and a number of these relatives would have welcomed an opportunity to share their anxiety , not only about the patient but about their own feelings ( Bond , 1982 ) .
12 He said this knowing that the architects were designing for a larger site quite unaware that only a portion had been authorized .
13 Given the composition of Council , it is likely that only the DTI stands in the way of adoption of this proposal : if it is adopted , I hope we will be spared further sanctimonious claims to the high ground by the Institute , and that it concedes it is operating predominantly in the interests of ( some of ) its members .
14 They subdivided the work further in order to ensure that there were aspects of the job that only the owners knew how to do .
15 The identity of the two activities is asserted , with a succinctness that only the build-up has made possible , in ‘ flowered acanthus ’ ( acanthus , a classical motif of architectural sculpture , is also the stylized representation of specific foliage ) , and also in ‘ Can you tell the down from the up ? ’ ( for there is no way of deciding whether ‘ nature ’ is the ‘ up ’ and ‘ art ’ the ‘ down ’ , or vice-versa ) .
16 There was a choking rattle and his eyes turned upwards , so that only the whites showed , red-veined and protruding slightly .
17 No one at the banquet could possibly have crossed the Firth of Forth in such weather with such speed and he knew from his own spies that only the King had crossed the Forth that night .
18 Corbetts , if you must , but the new bagging fashion is to find mountains that only the cognoscenti know and take at least a day 's walk to get into .
19 Hence there was a growing , if often reluctant , recognition that only the state had the resources to solve pressing social economic and political problems .
20 The process of canonization , which in early times had been very informal and by acclamation , became regulated under the Church 's supervision and Innocent stressed that only the pope had the authority to declare a saint , " for the confirmation of the Catholic faith and the confusion of heresy " , as he said .
21 He suspected that only the colonel seated in HQ , a mile behind the lines , really had much idea of what was going on .
22 It is the unheard-of , something that only the author knows : the vital knowledge that gives the author control over both the characters and the readers of the book .
23 Among ADAS 's five regions , the NAO discovered that only the south-west had a strategy for delivering public good advice on pollution , diversification and conservation .
24 If it was a sad end for England , they at least had the knowledge that only the weather deprived them of a draw .
25 ‘ Take a look behind , nephew , ’ came the answer , ‘ and you will see that already the litter carrying the prince has turned off for Westminster ! ’
26 case of the diagnostic tests this model looks reasonably okay , we have n't got erm significant serial correlation , we have n't breached form , we have reasonably normally distributed residuals , right , test for hetero skilasticity that just a test to see whether the residuals are growing over time , right , hetero skilasticity is where we have non constant , non constant variance of our , of our error term right , and very often you , you find that the variance through the residuals , something like that the residuals will look like that , I think , they 're growing systematically over time , right , these are homo skilastic right , and these are hetero skilastic right , residuals and again we would n't want to have a model of hetero skilastic residuals , right , simply because that violates one of the assumptions on which the blue properties are based .
27 ‘ Hey , did you say something about buying me some lunch , or is that just an approach to win a girl 's confidence ? ’
28 The thought coming back that somehow the Ghost had managed to add movement to her other impossible trick : the voice trick …
29 It transpired that somehow the clips had twisted and become detached from the rail , causing the only fatal accidents during the entire training programme .
30 An important consequence of this approach is that generally the courts have refused to accept that supervening events ( ie events subsequent to the time of contract ) can render an initially reasonable covenant unenforceable .
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