Example sentences of "which produce [art] " in BNC.

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1 After the break Oxford maintained their forward impetus , scoring a push-over try , and thereafter the sides alternated tries , culminating in the best of the afternoon when Smith , Hein and Curtis combined in a 60-metre break down the right which produced a diving touchdown for Curtis .
2 The opening salvo was fired by Japan , which produced a slick 20-minute video optimistically titled ‘ The Truth About Drift-netting . ’
3 The Consumers ' Association , which produced a report on the lamps two years ago , found that seven out of eight desk lamps exceeded international safety limits for ultraviolet radiation .
4 Irish Memory finished two and a half lengths away third — a cracking good run considering he was responsible , with Bold Pursuit , for the fast early gallop which produced a race time only 0.09sec slower than standard .
5 Then there was a long drought which produced a very poor harvest .
6 Mortified by this double-dealing and realizing that Bismarck had tricked him — ‘ I trusted him and he betrayed me ’ — Napoleon III had no option but to submit the question to an international conference which produced a solution by neutralizing Luxembourg .
7 Berny was destroyed in 1936 , after six attempted matings , which produced a total of four puppies , of which only one survived .
8 Natural selection would favour those strains which produced a symptomless infection .
9 Similarly , Larkin et al. ( 1988 ) have reported somaclonal variation in cultivars of wheat which produced a range of traits in mature individuals , including variation in resistance to the herbicide glyphosate .
10 The footpath went over the hatches to the Mill , at that time a bone-mill which produced a terrible smell that pervaded a wide area , rather spoiling the lovely spot .
11 The beginning of life was an ‘ event ’ which produced a living cell and every change involving that cell that occurred thereafter was a further ‘ event ’ in the evolutionary process .
12 Forney was then sold to Air Products Inc. , a Carlsbad , New Mexico corporation which produced a further ten examples , plus a one-off retractable version capable of 140 mph , before going bankrupt themselves !
13 The royal crackers are made in secret by the firm founded by Tom Smith in 1847 who , inspired by a crackling log in his fireplace , contrived to make a pretty confection which produced a ‘ mini explosion ’ .
14 Even the Trade and Industry Select Committee , which produced a lengthy report on the investigation system during 1990 , almost totally ignored the very existence of the s 447 enquiries , preferring to concentrate on the public inspections .
15 Walking towards the fire the ghost raised his hand and struck the watchman a smart blow on the body which produced a strange sensation .
16 Discrimination was measured in two ways , each of which produced a measure of test validity .
17 Worldwide membership of the 13-year-old Eastwood Appreciation Society — which produced a monthly magazine — had slumped from 1,000 to just 87 .
18 Ward went down in agony following a challenge from Rovers ' midfielder Mark Atkins , which produced a caution .
19 The crisis should now have been over except for a brief and unwise Greek sally against Turkey which produced a spasm of concerted action by the powers , pleased to find themselves able to agree in holding Greece back .
20 It was , in fact , an early hint of his involvement in more serious misdemeanours which produced a crisis four years later .
21 I moved from ground level to tower block level , which produced a dynamic image more in keeping with a 20th century view of city life .
22 The watercolours I used were raw sienna , French ultramarine and Indian red , which produced a series of slate greys and browns to match the London brick .
23 The pool , which produced a large number of coins and items of jewellery , suggestive of votive deposits , was approached through an imposing ante-room , given sophisticated architectural treatment .
24 These factories , which produced a range of goods from shoes to armour , brought in a regular profit for their owners , but the reliance on slave labour had disadvantages from the owners ' point of view ; the market for industrial goods was uncertain , and in slack times , when it was difficult to sell the products from the workshop , slaves still had to be fed and housed , even though their labour brought no immediate return for the owner .
25 Fayol ( 1916 ) , Taylor ( 1912 ) , Weber ( 1924 ) and others comprise the ‘ classical school ’ of management theorists , while Mayo ( 1949 ) , McGregor ( 1960 ) , Herzberg ( 1968 ) and Maslow ( 1970 ) fall into the ‘ human relations school ’ , which produced a series of motivation theories which became increasingly psychologically based .
26 This significatory potential of the object was seen as being affirmed by archaeology , which produced a sequence from the early stone age to the iron age and beyond , providing a temporal foundation for these assertions of social evolution ( Lowrie 1937 : 22 ) .
27 Inflation had slowed down in the United Kingdom to 5 per cent per year which produced a greater sense of economic security in terms of planning expenditures ahead .
28 This emergence marks two shifts : first , the declining importance of the church as the main patron for art , which produced a more secular emphasis — the guilds , it will be remembered , had almost always included a specifically religious element ; and , second , an increasing differentiation of ‘ arts ’ from ‘ crafts ’ .
29 Since in connection with this American libel we did not employ Mr Quintin Hogg , I wrote him a short letter and received a courteous reply : The third occasion when we instituted proceedings was several years later , in 1971 , when Harold Wilson was back in opposition , and related to the activities of the BBC , which produced a thoroughly incompetent piece of television called Yesterday 's Men .
30 For Delaunay it was the interaction of colours which produced a sense of form and space in a picture , whereas for Léger it meant the simultaneous presence in a painting of the three pictorial elements of line , form and colour , all used in a system of deliberate contrasts .
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