Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] to look at [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Leave five minutes before each interview to look at the candidate 's application form/letter , and any particular questions noted down while first reading it . |
2 | After 1986 , therefore , interest in EMU revived and in 1988 the Hanover summit set up another committee to look at the idea . |
3 | This enormous gift that , despite all the trying things that went with it , Phoebe had received ; this capacity to look at a thing and know that , because it must be done , it is the doing of it that brings freedom and salvation . |
4 | The ordinary canons of construction require this court to look at the words of the section and to give them their plain and natural meaning . |
5 | Then you came into this library to look at the books , spending perhaps twenty minutes here . |
6 | H3 is hard to study under trial conditions since any school agreeing to help with trials is making some commitment to look at the materials beyond the norm . |
7 | Mr Whitty told delegates the NEC had given them ‘ adequate time to look at the reviews ’ . |
8 | ‘ It was felt it was in the public interest to look at the company which was already insolvent , ’ said a DTI spokeswoman . |
9 | ‘ It was second nature to look at the linesman but I knew I was on . ’ |
10 | The commission is now going to set up a special working group to look at the problem . |
11 | The drama might be unfocused , but we can now ask each group to look at the others ' work as examples of what 's going on elsewhere in the street . |
12 | The three-year research project funded by the English National Board to look at the learning experiences in the community found working with students was ‘ time consuming ’ and ‘ slowed down the work of the nurse ’ . |
13 | We are establishing an ethical committee to look at the effects of advanced techniques in animal breeding . |
14 | Let us consider more closely what was implied in the Greek refusal to look at the Bible . |
15 | For me , it makes much more sense to look at the world from the point of view that things should be perfect . |
16 | A French medic was climbing the grassy bank from the sunken road to look at the Officer as I got the prisoners out of the dug-out and back to their previous positions in the hollow . |
17 | Reginald Bassett 's 1931 : Political Crisis , published in 1958 , was the first attempt to look at the events of 1931 free from contemporary preconceptions . |
18 | However , when you ask the first child to look at the card written on the piece of paper , it is the correct one . |
19 | SCOTVEC therefore welcomed the decision of SED to set up a small committee to look at the module/short course issues , particularly in the context of schools ' S3/4 stages . |
20 | It 's a difficult job to look at the legislation and see a way through it for organisations dealing with homelessness — there is no way through it . |
21 | One evening , when we were sorting , two successive pairs of charming Americans wandered through the open door to look at the Church . |
22 | Twenty years ago I took the same journey to look at the ruins of Glastonbury , destroyed by Fat Henry and his evil spirit , Thomas Cromwell . |
23 | It is crucial for any player to look at the ball with both eyes level , so as to judge the line and length properly . |
24 | It 's a modern affliction to look at an aircraft , something that has yet to reach its 100th birthday in our history , and take it for granted . |
25 | Having examined the income and retained earnings statements of the firm , the final way to look at the firm 's financial structure is to examine its balance sheet . |
26 | In Britain , the electronics industry has set up a working party to look at the options . |
27 | Ever since the RSPCA established a Working Party to look at the implications of fishing , we have been concerned about one of its conclusions , which is that fish should be given the benefit of the doubt with regard to their ability to experience pain . |
28 | In 1979 an operational researcher was brought in from the academic world to look at the use being made of Exminster . |
29 | NARAL is asking readers of the New York Times to see a loss of women 's rights as a loss of Americans ' rights , thus implying that this is a novel way to look at the matter . |