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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 John likes to keep the horses separate so that they do n't kick each other , but Hopscotch often jumps into Milton 's paddock to keep him company ; and sometimes if the weather is bad , one of the children 's ponies is turned out with him , otherwise Milton , who is a bit of a softy , will hang around by the gate in the hope that someone will take pity on him and take him back to his warm stable .
2 The athlete has told the court that the Evans ' marriage was completely over before she became involved , but Mrs Evans said she had no right to comment , since she was an adulteress , she added that Ms Sanderson is going around schools parading before children : ‘ If there 's any of the children 's fathers there that she fancies , will she take them ’ , she asked .
3 At the present time , the children looked after at Boat is seventy percent of the total of the Children 's Services budget , and therefore , there is er , a considerable er , sum of money being divested erm , in , in this area of work .
4 He indicated that , without specific application to children 's hearings , the nature of the children 's hearings system ‘ leaves [ it ] outside the benefit of this Bill ’ , and he added : ‘ It would be wrong to deny them the benefit of the Bill when , if they had committed serious offences and appeared before the courts , they would have had its protection . ’
5 Provision of 52-week accommodation but not necessarily the additional focus on care , or a series of different short-term holiday placements , can lead to fragmentation of the children 's lives and inadequate preparation for the adult world .
6 The current project will involve a detailed audit of the data held on magnetic tapes collected during the first ten years of the children 's lives .
7 In her defence , Outram explained that the teaching had led quite naturally out of the children 's questions .
8 ‘ This accident was the result of the failure of the children 's parents and grandparents to keep lighters and matches away from children . ’
9 The Children Act 1989 is likely to require much more account to be taken of the children 's views and those of their parents and other interested parties , but it is a process which is still seen as difficult , and is less frequently carried out than is desirable .
10 Even more unfortunately many professionals seems to encourage this by taking on ‘ ownership ’ of the children 's problems in the cases they deal with .
11 The degree of interactivity varies with the disc but levels of interactivity in some of the children 's discs , in particular , are well judged for the intended applications .
12 Social workers later discovered that one of the children 's grandmothers had offered to look after them , but was told other arrangements had been made .
13 Middlesbrough 's beck valleys are the main attention of the children 's efforts in the mammoth tidy-up co-ordinated by the council 's public protection department .
14 To make it easier , you could buy little marzipan animals instead of moulding them yourself — however , if you do make your own , it might be fun to make them in the shape of the children 's pets and pipe their names on to them .
15 All of the children 's events were successful with varying attendances .
16 All of the children 's events were successful with varying attendances .
17 If on close inspection , educators can begin to understand the great importance of these supposed ‘ gestures ’ in portraying the syntax and semantics of sign language communication , then a more effective view of the children 's needs in language will emerge .
18 General Booth of the Salvation Army , had recognition by the City of London conferring on him the Freedom of the City , in 1905 , which was also the year when Dr. T.J. Barnard ( the founder of the Children 's Homes that bear his name ) , died on 19th , September .
19 Then in answer to Merrill 's raised eyebrows , ‘ They 're from one of the children 's homes .
20 Speaking to one of the workers in one of the children 's homes , said do you think that child prostitution in the children 's homes is something new because it 's on the front of the T and A ?
21 Furthermore , a casual inspection of some of the children 's workbooks in Standard 7 will reveal in most subjects lists of question numbers at the side of the page and then merely the corresponding answer letter , a , b , c , or d .
22 erm er and the spelling of it , you , you asked , I think , about the , about the Bridgit side of it and so on and , and questioned that and then again later on picked up a bit about the er tt about the spelling of the children 's names so you , you went along with him on , on that .
23 Some of the children 's expectations were so heartbreakingly wrong that it was clear that much more needed to be done to inform young people about what work is really like .
24 ‘ It was the day before my estimated delivery date , which also happened to be one of the children 's birthdays and half-term holidays , so I was very busy .
25 By 1935 the success of the children 's books made it possible for Ransome to buy a sea-going boat once again .
26 Chrissy Allott , Catherine Snelling and Nick Spokes of Fullwell Cross Library in Ilford , Essex , have written to me in response to Brough Girling 's recent call for suggestions as to what might have happened in grown-up life to the heroes and heroines of the children 's books of our youth .
27 I was keeping a glass of chablis company the other day with Jonathan Hayden and Fiona Brownlee from Pavilion Books , and we got talking about what might have happened in grown-up life to the heroes and heroines of the children 's books of our youth .
28 This sort of awareness of the children 's requirements is a key role for the teacher in most activities as she tries to anticipate and provide for the next stage in each child 's development .
29 And when you sat , trembling forgetfully , on one of the benches in the frosted gardens , with the grass like white hair standing on end , you felt you could hear the ghosts of the children 's cries and shouts — for here they must surely have played in their packs .
30 Ideally reflection will : raise the status of the children 's contributions draw significance from the work help the children understand the meanings in their work , and how they have used dramatic forms to create those meanings move the drama forward — both in terms of the narrative and the quality of learning .
  Next page