Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] represents a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Sums of money I am describing tonight are large , revenue and capital spending combined , of over three thousand million pounds is many times the amount spent by quangos in Wales outside the health service and the grant represents a large share of my total budget for Wales and I hope members opposite are not suggesting I should cut spending on health , that is a vital service which I thought they supported as well .
2 Reasons are that the PC has become the conventional engineering tool ; most DSP applications programs run under ms-dos ; hardware interfacing of target DSP boards to the PC has become a standard practice , and the PC represents a low cost entry point into the field of DSP development .
3 Clothing is one of the largest sectors of UK industry and is particularly important in Northern Ireland , where total employment in the industry represents a substantial proportion of all those employed in manufacturing .
4 The methodology represents a significant change in the development of computing systems away from the technology , in particular , hardware and software ( including programming techniques and algorithms ) , and towards data and the way it is structured .
5 The investment represents a personal victory for the city 's Principal Arts Officer , Elizabeth Goodall , who has led a long campaign to educate local politicians of the cultural and economic rewards to be reaped from properly investing in the visual arts infrastructure .
6 Conversely , whilst there may in a few cases be valid reasons for a high quality paper not being submitted to such journals , it could be argued that in some cases publication outside the core represents a negative value judgement on the quality of that research .
7 Conversely , whilst there may in a few cases be valid reasons for a high quality paper not being submitted to such journals , it could be argued that in some cases publication outside the core represents a negative value judgement on the quality of that research .
8 I do not accept that the proposal represents a major surrender of sovereignty .
9 The Act represents a particular view both of the nature of learning and schools as organisations .
10 Professor Colin Bell , of Edinburgh University 's sociology department , said : ‘ The conference represents a unique opportunity for the doctors and nurses who care for people who are generally regarded as being ‘ hopelessly ill ’ to get together with lawyers , philosophers and sociologists to discuss the very real dilemmas — social , legal and medical — posed by such people .
11 The inquiry represents a genuine need for information which could have been partly fulfilled by traditional means such as telephone books or local guides but which could be investigated more thoroughly by using Prestel .
12 The group represents a wide cross section of the industry from Hewlett-Packard Co to Intel Corp , NCR Corp to US West Inc , and its mission is to develop an enterprise-wide product knowledge management system to help resolve product-related problems suffered by customers .
13 As Paolozzi explains in this leaflet , ‘ The whole represents a strong belief in optimism and progress ’ .
14 The whole represents a strong belief in optimism and progress .
15 Unless the manager represents a big artist , he or she would n't work with the record company 's senior directors .
16 The firm represents a large number of cargo shipping lines .
17 The total represents a three-fold increase on the previous decade , but the real death toll is thought to be far higher .
18 Most of these , it is true , are poorly preserved and common late Ae3s — but the total represents a phenomenal amount compared to twenty years ago .
19 A great sense of frustration is building up because many hon. Members feel that the Bill represents a lost opportunity for British Rail .
20 Some experts believe that the fast-breeder represents a key advance which will realize nuclear power 's full potential .
21 The pasta shown on the right of the plate represents a standard portion
22 Furthermore , the Report represents a familiar tactic through which influential groups are recruited in the voluntary service of state interests and policies .
23 However , the project represents a classic archiving application .
24 the extent to which the project represents a genuine partnership between staff , students and employers ;
25 The boost from the province represents a complete about-face by the New Democratic Party , whose Culture and Communications Minister Karen Haslam had chided the gallery for its ‘ elitism ’ and imposed devastating cutbacks that forced the museum to lay off 244 employees and close for seven months last year ( see The Art Newspaper No.22 , November 1992 , p.7 and No.24 , January 1993 , p.8 ) .
26 If the image represents a still photograph we can frame it by using an overhead projector as a light source , as if the image is a photographic transparency .
27 This is not to suggest that the book represents a feminist polemic .
28 The scheme represents a huge assault on the domestic phone business of market leader BT .
29 The publication of land registers for the greater part of the country represents a major opportunity to secure the better use of massive acreages of underused land .
30 They note that the FMI represents a particular view of what accountable management ( and even management accounting ) is about .
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