Example sentences of "with [art] times " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Zuckerman has enabled Roth to deal with the question of the offence he has given to righteous Jews , and to come to terms with the rebellious , psychedelic , philo-Semitic Sixties , when Roth 's writing went , with the times , derisive and fantastic .
2 Her sexual habits had changed with the times and , besides , in England all the signifiers seemed different .
3 The major auction houses have moved with the times and have found new ways of selling works which in both form and content would have proved an unstable investment a decade ago .
4 Dice rolling with the times .
5 The consequence of the Knoyles ' poverty and the Hutchings ' absenteeism over the previous two centuries was that the Manor House had a miraculous escape from Georgian owners wanting to keep up with the times .
6 Even silver-screen George changes with the times when , after an entertaining accident in Rome , he re-emerges as a convertible with a Renault 4 bonnet .
7 Ever since it was formed in a merger 55 years ago , ICI 's portfolio has had to change with the times .
8 They had failed to change with the times , so the speeches they wrote for the Queen did her no favours .
9 By the 1890s architectural styles generally were changing and Gothic had largely run its course ; Cubitt 's arguments were in step with the times .
10 Motoring : Can R-R keep up with the times ?
11 But even Rolls-Royce must be seen to be moving with the times .
12 He makes clear in an interview with the Times today that in a hung parliament his party would ‘ bargain very hard indeed ’ to stop Labour removing the £21,060 ceiling on National Insurance payments and introducing a 50p tax rate for top earners .
13 Dorking County Grammar , a mixed provincial grammar school of around 600 pupils , moved with the times and became the Ashcombe School , a mixed comprehensive of 1,000 pupils .
14 In 1945 Labour won because its thinking was clearly in tune with the times .
15 Whitehall must move with the times .
16 The anatomical detail of the muscles below the skin is alarming , but very much in keeping with the times , when there was a great interest in anatomical detail .
17 Agatha Christie 's Miss Marple moves with the times , staying in tweeds but shedding her dowdy image .
18 As the game was revolutionized in the 1930s with the advent of steel-shafted clubs and rubber golf balls , so the caddies moved with the times .
19 ‘ You see , Carmella , we 've had to move with the times , you understand .
20 The judgment in this case , Cresswell and others v Board of Inland Revenue ( 1984 ) , contained robust comment on the need to move with the times :
21 According to Central Statistical Office data ( 1988 ) the largest number of road casualties per hour coincide with the times of day when traffic is at its heaviest , reaching a peak between 5 and 6 p.m. and with a secondary peak between 8 and 9 a.m .
22 The press reacted in familiar manner , with The Times observing that it was ‘ becoming unsafe for a man to traverse certain parts of London at night ’ .
23 If they go into the market place where they can command personal insight of a Christian way of life then they will move with the times .
24 Critics may argue that it has not moved enough with the times , is not as up-to-date in its special effects as its counterparts across the Atlantic , but this perhaps highlights its attraction .
25 Moving with the times
26 In your natural desire to extol the virtues , however , your leader ( ’ Moving with the times , ’ 27 January .
27 ‘ I regret some of the changes , but I think you 've got to accept them and move with the times , however unfortunate that may be . ’
28 Our perception of what should be censored , therefore , changes with the times and over time .
29 Perhaps the problem lay with the times .
30 It was of a piece with the times .
  Next page