Example sentences of "of [art] [noun pl] in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The abilities of the computer will remind some readers of the experiments in many school resource centres using , instead of the Dewey Classification and a simple card catalogue , one or other variety of post co-ordinate indexing , frequently with optical coincidence punched cards .
2 It is true that many of the experiments in this area were grossly inadequate in method : they failed to ensure that the individuals they studied were similar , apart from the single factor being scrutinized ; they relied unduly on mothers ' memories for information about early events ; their various findings could not be compared because of disagreement about what should be counted as ‘ early weaning ’ or ‘ harsh training ’ , and so on .
3 In this context , we now see the problems of systematics condensing around two major , interrelated questions , which form the two main themes running through most of the papers in this book .
4 Three of the papers in this collection examine the relationship between these two professions from a historical perspective .
5 This is particularly so in the case of the topic of the papers in this volume — namely peace as a social value .
6 As becomes clear from most of the papers in this collection , this particular view of human nature is not one shared by many other societies .
7 Many of the papers in this volume set the human agent within a cosmology , a total moral universe of meaning .
8 ‘ Traditional climatic geomorphology as represented by most of the papers in this volume has to a large extent glossed over this paucity of knowledge of fundamentals ; it may be said to have proceeded , like Davis 's work , to premature generalization on the basis of quite vague ideas on the underlying process relations .
9 As many of the papers in this section reveal , the new technologies are providing information specialists with the ability to improve access to collections for academic research , especially via networks , to enhance the quality of texts , and to develop more powerful means of analysis .
10 A sub-theme running through many of the papers in this collection concerns the politics of data ; data for sale , data for citizenship , data as power , data as a cost …
11 Which most kids are , with 82 million of the games in global circulation .
12 Which most kids are , with 82 million of the games in global circulation .
13 Then again though i did miss most of the games in 91–92 , so maybe I 'm biased .
14 First he takes black and white photographs of the parchments in ultra-violet light .
15 Many of the villages in close proximity to Sherwood Forest have also played a role in the legendary tales of our hero .
16 One of the sentences in one of the little stories in the booklet ( in its own words filled with useful and stimulating ideas to help executives lead and inspire their people ) talks about the fine arts of management .
17 The reorganisation of local government in London Provided the forerunner of the reorganisations in other parts of the country in the 1970s .
18 He won further prestige when he was nominated for an Oscar as Best Supporting Actor for Twilight of the Gods in 1963 .
19 Much of the earlier work was done on Mediterranean terraces and these , as well as many of the terraces in other areas , can not be directly related to Pleistocene events .
20 Once you have made yourself familiar with the basic sewing processes , you will then be able to cope with any of the projects in this book .
21 To make sense of the trends in overall fertility , and to attempt to answer questions about future family size , we need to know more of the ‘ components ’ of the changes in annual births .
22 One of the trends in military publishing over recent years has been a move away from the hardware itself towards its operational use and the personal experiences of the men in the front line .
23 Many of the trends in British politics in the 1980s have had counterparts in other western states .
24 ( d ) First registration of title Unless any money is paid , such that there is a conveyance on sale of the whole of the property , it is not thought that any of the transactions in this chapter will involve a compulsory application for first registration of title ( Land Registration Act 1925 , s123 ) .
25 The House of Commons 1558–1603 , 1981 ; T. S. Willan , The Muscovy Merchants of 1555 , 1953 ; F. F. Foster , The Politics of Stability : a Portrait of the Rulers in Elizabethan London , 1977 . ]
26 Generalizations about the state of the towns in late medieval England are , however , risky ; each had its own history , which might be very different from that of its neighbour , and it is likely that even when more individual studies have been made of particular towns the general picture will be one of diversity rather than of similarity .
27 A visit to any of the properties in this leaflet will introduce you , at first hand , to many aspects of English history and reveal the extent of all that remains to be discovered .
28 Disabled Visitors : many of the properties in this leaflet are accessible to visitors in wheelchairs , and are suitable for escorted visually handicapped visitors .
29 An encouraging number of the properties in Empty Quarters have already been snapped up .
30 If those hurdles are cleared , the union and employers can haggle over the size of the hikes in basic wages and the conditions under which unprofitable firms can wriggle out of paying them .
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