Example sentences of "change in [noun pl] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 At various points in this book , we may be able to discern how changes in attitudes of curriculum planners to the purpose of the primary school manifest themselves in new ideas about languages of instruction , a new urgency in finding out about community needs , an increased commitment to the concept of basic education .
2 RBL hopes to be able to respond more imaginatively to changes in attitudes towards authority .
3 Changes in attitudes to masturbation were manifest by the end of the nineteenth century .
4 But the existence of a quiet pro-American majority in Britain , France and Germany is not proof against big changes in attitudes to America 's role in the world .
5 Changes in attitudes to authority , including parental and conjugal authority , have extended the choices open to women and young people .
6 It has also been argued that changes in patterns of work may alter the balance of domestic work .
7 The question of changes in patterns of inequality in the distribution of wealth must therefore be considered in detail ; our empirical evidence will relate to contemporary Britain .
8 We need to be aware of changes in patterns of kinship and in the organisation of the family and household .
9 These repercussions generally follow because of induced changes in patterns of migration , commuting and occupational mobility .
10 The aim of this new project is to relate wages and prices to a series of model household budgets designed to reflect changes in patterns of consumption and expenditure .
11 The early sociologists were greatly influenced by the changes in patterns of life which they saw going on around them as industrialisation proceeded , and they were often deeply disturbed by what they saw .
12 Even if they do not cut effective costs , they will bring about changes in patterns of demand for services .
13 In the face of changes in patterns of demand , output and competition in the mid- to late twentieth century these industries have experienced something of a decline .
14 The old have to accept changes in patterns of living and cultural standards that they can not understand , and cope with rejection by the younger generations , as well as a good deal of sentimentality and shallow stereotyping in private and public references to themselves .
15 New skills and flexibilities are needed to cope with increasing new technology , the single European market , the internationalisation of markets , changes in the structure and nature of employment , and changes in patterns of consumer demand and the distribution of disposable income .
16 Titmuss felt that changes in patterns of pregnancy and childbirth had been a much more important factor in explaining changes in women 's position in society than the acquisition of legal rights .
17 In making this break with tradition , James , it seems , had come to the conclusion that it was time for the intellectual elite to shut up and listen to the workers for a change for it was they who were at the sharp end of the production system and therefore they who first sensed any changes in patterns of production .
18 The last decade or so has seen significant changes in patterns of employment .
19 The 1980s have seen dramatic changes in patterns of employment and labour relations , and sustained mass unemployment .
20 Clearly these are all matters which would repay up-to-date research , since it seems that we may be witnessing important social changes in patterns of family support at the present time .
21 Where research studies have been carried out in different parts of the country it is difficult to disentangle anything which might be attributed to regional variations specifically , from other systematic variations by gender , class , ethnicity or variations over time ( that is where changes in patterns of family relationships have occurred between the 1960s and the 1980s ) .
22 Despite Government counter-claims that this increase is due to 1986 changes in definitions of accidents from minor to major and fatal categories , all the increases can not be accounted for by the redefinition .
23 Although care must be taken in interpreting data because of changes in definitions of households , and imprecision in terminology such as ‘ married couple ’ , some trends are nevertheless clearcut .
24 Changes in the marginal distribution of the response variable will always produce changes in differences in proportions , even if the cells are still distributed in the same proportion ; if , for example , the supply of selective school places doubled but the class composition of the schools remained the same , d would change .
25 Changes in rights of audience may well result in a slimming down of the practising Bar .
26 For professional staff , qualification courses form a minority of the programmes undertaken , though suggested changes in routes to Fellowship currently being debated , may alter the balance of qualification-related/non-qualification training .
27 The 1987 changes in conditions of service did not alter that .
28 Management fees of investment trusts are considerably lower than those of unit trusts because of the wide disparities in money spent on advertising , although with the changes in rules on advertising for investment trusts , their fees are likely to rise .
29 Early work in the 19305 and 194056 had established that there were systematic changes in brainwaves with sleep , in that large , slow waves developed very soon ( within fifteen minutes ) after a subject fell asleep at night , and during the night the amplitude of these waves waxed and waned .
30 Use is not necessarily a major factor , and Peasgood 's article describing changes in allocations between faculties according to past use probably reflects the exception rather than the rule .
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