Example sentences of "[that] [vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Latest results from Europe 's centre for particle physics point to the possible discovery of the W , a particle that plays a key role in theoretical attempts to unite two of nature 's forces |
2 | Althusser termed such a view ‘ historicism ’ : an abstract philosophical scheme that imposes an overall process of transformation upon historical events . |
3 | Nevertheless , failures will be encountered and such failures can eventually attain a degree of seriousness that constitutes a serious crisis for the paradigm and may lead to the rejection of a paradigm and its replacement by an incompatible alternative . |
4 | But what we find in the resurrection of Jesus is not something that originates from the natural processes of life , but something that constitutes a unique event . |
5 | ‘ The best design strategy is not to program a computer directly with the wealth of descriptive detail that constitutes a natural language but rather to give it the basic set of expectations and abilities that are needed to learn a language . ’ |
6 | Those concepts have not evolved from the old ones , for it is precisely their radical difference that constitutes the new science , the new ‘ positivity ’ , produced by what he termed an ‘ epistemological rupture ’ . |
7 | The stimulus that the experimenter regards as the CS might interact with features of the context in which training is given to form a unique cue that constitutes the effective CS ( see Rescorla 1972 , 1973 ) . |
8 | It is precisely this formal disturbance in the texture of Nizan 's fiction that constitutes the very essence of his project as a communist novelist . |
9 | Toxic chemicals are assigned a ‘ no observed effect level ’ , a dosage that produces no apparent harm in a certain percentage of lab animals . |
10 | A dreadful pregnancy or birth that produces a healthy baby can make it difficult for a mother to allow her baby to cry even for a few minutes . |
11 | An important complement to lemon grass is kaffir lime leaf , the leaf of the tree that produces a wrinkly lime . |
12 | Although this former psychiatric ward sister can appear world weary , cynicism dropping from every pore , there is a tongue in cheek panache that produces a double reaction as the barbs strike home ; the ‘ oof ’ gut jerk followed immediately in some cases by a form of enlightenment . |
13 | Thus it is plausible to view science as an enormous cluster of innovations , of which the most successful are diffused by means of a contagion process that produces a logistic curve in all facets of scientific activity . ’ |
14 | This class , whatever we call it , can not be properly understood and its historic role can not be adequately explained , outside the necessity that produces the eternal contradiction of capitalist accumulation on a mass scale . |
15 | Is there a commercially available package that produces the required format ? |
16 | Where subducting lithosphere is sufficiently hot , it can melt before it dehydrates , leaving a garnet-hornblende residue that produces the low Yb contents and high La/Yb ratios characteristic of high-Al TTD suites . |
17 | Setting aside the details of which desktop publishing package you use , the hardware that you run it on and the output device that produces the final pages there is one common element remaining ; fonts . |
18 | But Alu sequences are not transcribed by polymerase II : instead they are copied by the enzyme ( polymerase III ) that produces the specialised RNAs — ( ribosomal and transfer RNAs ) that are never translated into proteins themselves but participate in the translation of other RNAs . |
19 | Built like a prop forward , a pair of huge shoulders generate sharp pace from an approach that evokes a rampant rhino . |
20 | Modernity is a word that evokes a different response in North America , Continental Europe and Great Britain . |
21 | It is in the music of his latter years that one can find him reliving an older manner that evokes the comfortable world which Humperdinck , wisely , never left . |
22 | Willem de Kooning received in absentia an award for lifetime achievement , and Martin Puryear for sculpture ‘ that evokes the human struggle to balance the needs for both the comfort of stability and the excitement of freedom ’ . |
23 | It is a biological catalyst , a catalyst being something that encourages a chemical reaction to proceed at a faster rate than it would do normally . |
24 | The use of animated graphics can focus attention ; an investigatory program style that encourages a high level of pupil participation will arouse interest and possibly a healthy curiosity about the new work . |
25 | In this case , it would seem natural to establish an accounting system that records the annual debts ( principal and interest ) , in which each year 's debt charges signal the property tax rate ( having taken account of rateable value ) and which subsequently accounts for the actual expenditure and actual revenues ( to determine whether next year 's taxes need adjusting ) . |
26 | Ask friends what 's worked for them or buy a paperback that offers a realistic diet and know you can keep to . |
27 | Sadly , there is no respite for parents ; this is the time that offers a brief opportunity to make an encouraging or acknowledging remark . |
28 | Beyond , the huge sea cliffs of the northern edge of Heimæy form a sharp ridge that offers an airy walk . |
29 | Given a situation where land is being used to provide agricultural produce for export , one solution to the problem of food shortages , would be to make the land that supplies the domestic market more productive . |
30 | But I do not think that the characteristic that turns a simple assault into a sexual assault is solely a matter of anatomy . |