Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [verb] [prep] the times " in BNC.

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1 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 :
2 This was the argument voiced by The Times on 8 October : ‘ The working of parliamentary institutions , of democratic responsibility , and of constitutional practice , demands it . ’
3 THE OBITUARY APPEARED in The Times the next day , Tuesday 11th December .
4 He saw to it that notices of the birth appeared in The Times and the Telegraph within another twenty-four hours .
5 The letter published in The Times today from the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster expresses the profound disquiet among many people who are concerned about genuine asylum seekers .
6 It success is partly demonstrated by the fact that school examination results in West Sussex ranked third in the country according to The Times performance league .
7 He would catch the bus to Piccadilly Circus — he sat on the top deck and worked on the crossword before turning to the company reports in The Times .
8 Perhaps the problem lay with the times .
9 I had the club already going , was dealing with mainly young people , and as you will know young people 's taste tends to vary quite considerably and very quickly , so I might well be very successful for so long and then if suddenly taste changed and I had n't got the ability to change with the times I realized that it would be rather precarious , so I needed a second string to my bow .
10 Two days after the debate , on 6th August , 1859 , a leader appeared in The Times which not only questioned Scott 's suitability for the appointment , but also the new attitude of the professional architect towards his client .
11 The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi was a slickly-packaged Indian guru with a message tailored to the times .
12 In a letter published in The Times on March 2nd , the Cardinal said : ‘ Whatever stance individuals may take over the morality of the nuclear deterrent , there must be general agreement on the aim of preventing the spread of weapons to non-nuclear states . ’
13 Although it is difficult to assess its importance , on the eve of the second reading debate a letter appeared in The Times , signed by eight peers , including Lord Devlin .
14 Colnaghi contributed little to American museums in these years ( the 1930s and 1940s ) and what they did sell betrayed an unwillingness to adapt to the times .
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