Example sentences of "publicly [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Both had in May called publicly for a return to a multiparty system .
2 ‘ I think the draw had already been done [ before being ] shown publicly for the benefit of television , ’ he said .
3 He had infuriated the government by calling publicly for the resignation of Foreign Minister Geza Jeszenszky , whom he described as incompetent , and by complaining that he had been forced to lie to US politicians about the sale of Hungarian weapons to Croatia .
4 Several senior officers and other experts argued publicly for the abolition of conscription and for the creation of a smaller professional Army .
5 Being convicted involves being identified publicly as a criminal , and it is in this context that we can say that being found guilty is the same as being guilty .
6 Little is known publicly about the effects of the air raids on supply lines and ground troops , except that Iraq 's anti-aircraft guns and missiles have continued to fire .
7 Just occasionally the tensions spilled over , such as when she berated Moira publicly about the way she was feeding her first child .
8 But , for the first time , they have had their ambassador in Washington speak publicly about the issue .
9 MISS E will not talk publicly about the day she accepted a glass of wine from Dr Tom Courtney .
10 Sir Frank Cooper is happy to speak publicly about the Thatcher Cabinet style , of which he approves :
11 He spoke publicly about the need for each state to work out its own solution and erm earlier in that year , in fact it 's nineteen fifty seven , I think I said fifty four before , er earlier in that year nineteen fifty seven er Eisenhower said in a speech in r in response to a hypothetical question he said I ca n't imagine any set of circumstances that would ever induce me to send federal troops into any state to enforce the orders of a federal court .
12 Speaking for the first time publicly about the death of Leonora , five , Lady Romsey praises Charles for his ‘ incredible caring and understanding . ’
13 But its present leader , Mikhail Gorbachev , has spoken publicly about the importance of introducing democracy into the area of production :
14 We have already noted that the polytechnic directors were seeking a larger measure of academic independence almost from the moment of designation — most publicly through the CDP press statement in July 1971 expressing a wish for the polytechnics to secure charters .
15 The meeting also approved changes to voting arrangements , abolishing certain procedures first employed in 1988 party elections [ see p. 36137 ] , including the controversial queue-voting system ( whereby voters in primary elections queued publicly behind a picture of their preferred candidate ) and the rule under which candidates obtaining 70 per cent of the votes in such primaries were entitled to go forward unopposed .
16 For example , it was quite a story in December 1985 when Mrs Thatcher briefly appeared to have allowed Michael Heseltine , Secretary of State for Defence , to campaign publicly against the Cabinet 's position that the Westland helicopter company could do a deal with the American firm Sikorsky if its shareholders so wished .
17 A combination of government secrecy and collective responsibility ( the notion that an individual member must not disagree publicly with a Cabinet decision ) have made it difficult to discover the extent to which cabinets are genuinely collective decision-making bodies , but a succession of leaks and memoirs , such as Richard Crossman 's ( Crossman , 1975–7 ) , has built up a picture of a committee in which genuine debate tends to be restricted to issues that come to assume major political importance for the government .
18 It is a corollary of collective responsibility that any minister who disagrees publicly with a cabinet decision should resign and that a government defeat in the House of Commons on a vote of confidence necessitates either the resignation of the government or a request for a dissolution ( there is no convention as to which of these alternatives the government should select ) .
19 It is preferable if the tenders are opened publicly with the tenderers given the opportunity of being present , so that fair play can be clearly seen to have taken place .
20 The traditional means of making sure that stock market prices reflect available information is to require firms to disclose relevant information publicly via the imposition of disclosure requirements .
21 16–7- Duncan McGilvray , a Deacon , who had been seen publicly in a state of intoxication was ordered to be publicly rebuked .
22 What is interesting is that Burton was prepared to talk about it publicly in a way which implied that he had sexual problems before this date .
23 The political turn was signalled publicly in an address given by Bukharin at a memorial meeting on the fifth anniversary of the death of Lenin on 21 January 1929 .
24 Simultaneously MacArthur expressed his views publicly in an interview with the British correspondent , G. Ward Price , which appeared in the Daily Mail on 2 March .
25 Lowe was quick to learn the various practices of the law profession , and decided upon conveyancing — transferring property from one person to another by purchase , lease or deed — as that branch of the law where his deafness was less of a handicap , and did so well that in the Michaelmas Term of 1829 , he took the prescribed oaths publicly in the Temple Hall and emerged as a Barrister of the Middle Temple — a most unprecedented event which created a sensation in the profession .
26 The individual 's responsibility in conversion is to repent and believe ; God 's initiative and response are his gift of forgiveness and his gift of the Holy Spirit ; and the church 's role is to welcome the new believer into fellowship , symbolizing this publicly in the act of baptism .
27 Alison had kissed her too , with a would-be significant kiss , but publicly in the hall .
28 Nevertheless , the issue was discussed publicly in the winter of 1936 – 37 , when Carlist and Falangist newspapers published articles about it in December 1936 and January 1937 .
29 Criticism of the current government , expressed publicly in the newspaper of the ruling Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party ( SRSP ) and at an SRSP central committee meeting on Jan. 8 , led the country 's President ( and SRSP secretary-general ) , Maj.-Gen.
30 I much prefer expressing my views publicly in the House to my constituents and others .
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