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

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1 There followed an awful period of nearly a year when she was unemployed , searching the back pages of the Times Higher Education Supplement in vain every week for lectureships in nineteenth-century English Literature .
2 But Council members began meeting in private the day before the full session .
3 But for all this fine façade , in private the ambitions of the Mughal Emperors knew no moral limitations : without scruple they would murder their brothers , poison their sisters or starve their fathers .
4 George had told him in private the reason for Sarah Butler being packed off to Leeds , and he had realised then that her infatuation for George was an obsession .
5 In public the actions of the Emperor and his court were governed by a rigid code of courtliness , as subtle and elaborate as the interlaced borders the Mughal artists painted around their miniatures .
6 He had neither remained discreetly silent , nor had he made any attempt to explain in public the reasons for his resignation .
7 It referred to the regional strategy which is currently out for consultation but was an emerging document and copies of that were again appended to the briefing paper it outlined the county council 's procedures which were followed in progress in the structure plan it outlined a programme establishing the weight of opinion of objectors it indicated our process in preparing policy amendments to be put to the panel and all those matters were made public It also requested the panel 's view on the role of county council members at the enquiry in public the responses to that were not made public and were in fact a question which was clearly put to the panel .
8 For his skill in guiding the vessel within feet of Mr Peter and Mrs Margaret Darling , Mr Peter Hodge , aged 44 , of Ings Road , Redcar , will travel to the Royal Festival Hall in London in May to receive the RNLI bronze medal .
9 His authority in dealings with the government — and , indeed , rapport with de Klerk — is vital in guiding the country through one of its most difficult phases .
10 And then fourthly , more and more the orthodox churches placed , played a very significant part in guiding the port of as far as as the assembly was concerned .
11 ESVEM showed no difference in the predictive accuracy of ambulatory monitoring or electrophysiological testing in guiding the selection of antiarrhythmic drug therapy in this population .
12 A technique known as " funnelling " in which more general questions are followed by more specific ones amplifying the general ones can be useful in guiding the interviewer through the schedule and encouraging the respondent to give fuller answers .
13 Insofar as Kuhn recognizes the role played by a paradigm in guiding the search for and interpretation of observable phenomena , he accommodates most of what I have described as the theory-dependence of observation in Chapter 3 .
14 Van Soest has achieved a considerable feat in guiding the reader through the complexities of ruminant nutrition with great clarity and at times a fine sense of humour .
15 He had thought that he must come back to her now as a stranger , learning afresh the shape of her wide forehead and tapering face , and the way she had of opening her eyes wide to take in entire the person to whom she spoke .
16 It was an exquisitely warm afternoon in Aswan-just the sort of day for which the swallows fly so far , When the Shah walked slowly down from the plane , looking drawn and exhausted , Sadat stepped forward to kiss him on both cheeks — despite advice from his officials that he should be more circumspect with the fallen King .
17 And we 'll do the whole lot altogether the er traffic and the trains and planes in full every day on the county 's favourite at ten past one .
18 To appreciate the true scope of the world 's largest sphere , you need to know in full the properties of KYNAR 500 PVF 2 .
19 This position is of course and the differential dXi is given by as may be verified by writing out in full the expression in square brackets .
20 Will the Minister give an assurance that the Government will implement in full the recommendations of the recent Farm Animal Welfare Council report on the welfare of laying hens in colony systems ?
21 Russia took 75 per cent ; Moldova and Ukraine would finance in full the troops on their territories and participate in financing joint forces through absolute contributions ; Tajikistan , Kirgizstan and Turkmenistan were not paying for the upkeep of troops on their territory .
22 A later chapter will discuss in full the use of audio-visual aids in ward learning .
23 We will ensure that the Parliament becomes an effective partner with the Council in law-making , exercising in full the power of ‘ co-decision ’ .
24 Mr Justice Morrit held that the first payment of £4,000 on 30 January together with the monthly sum of £1,000 by banker 's order was not enough to discharge in full the invoice for January 's work by the accountants , which was £5,307.25 .
25 This is not the place to discuss in full the nature of the modular approaches nor to detail the achievements of those schools in the forefront of this curriculum initiative .
26 My My Lords I I 'm sure it is n't necessary for me in referring very briefly to the amendments to which er I have done er it is n't necessary for me to recount in full the arguments with which Your Lordships are already becoming very familiar .
27 At the first meeting there is set out in full the Protest by Ministers and Elders of 18th May 1843 , and the Act of Separation and Deed of Demission by Ministers .
28 Blundell foresees equivalent advantages in transgenic plants for foods , fibres , energy products , pharmaceuticals , organic chemicals and construction materials — in short a return to agriculture as a major source of raw materials .
29 If the term ‘ Abstract Expressionist ’ means anything verifiable , it means painterliness : loose , rapid handling , or the look of it ; masses that blot and fuse instead of shapes that stay distinct ; large , conspicuous rhythms ; broken color ; uneven saturations or densities of paint ; exhibited brush , knife , finger or rag marks — in short a constellation of physical features like those defined by Wölflinn when he extracted his notion of the Malerische from Baroque art .
30 In short a process of levelling up rather than the levelling down anticipated by many critics of comprehensive provision .
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