Example sentences of "to [art] [adj] and [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He parried the stories of wealth and of smuggling : all town talk , he said , and besides , people in Borrowdale just would not be up to the scheming and deception involved , not the people he knew in Borrowdale and he had been born there — as had his wife — born there — as had their parents
2 She was the strongest of us all , the wisest and the kindest — she gave hope to the sad and courage to the weak .
3 They were certainly very clear twenty years ago according to the regional and county data analysed by Coates and Rawstron ( 1971 ) .
4 In 1974 this fund was allocated to the regional and area health authorities , and in 1982 it was once again reallocated to the new district authorities .
5 The scornful response to the latter and silence about the former soon gives the game away .
6 Over the years he had become as used to the rocking and swaying of a train as an experienced sailor is to the pitching and rolling of a ship .
7 Bukharin was warning that there should not be such a fundamental revision of policies as would mean a return to the arbitrary and commandist methods of ‘ war communism ’ , This meant that , for Bukharin , industrialisation should proceed within the established framework .
8 They had checked similar seats that had been subjected to the rough and tumble of Metropolitan Police life , and ones that had supported over 70,000 miles , and they were all right as rain .
9 And that , I reflected on the final leg , enveloped in air-conditioned heat and six-speaker stereo sound , is why the Discovery is so uniquely suited , not only to the rough and tumble of off-road riding , but also to the equal rigours of life in Knightsbridge and Notting Hill Gate .
10 But indirectly the growing public awareness of science and its potential shaped the professionals ' world by exposing it to the rough and tumble of political life .
11 For some children , this clinginess is just a phase , which will disappear when she gets more used to the rough and tumble of the other children .
12 I was happy in my Office ; it was exacting but I could carry it easily in the House of Lords ; and I had no wish to re-submit myself to the rough and tumble of electioneering and the House of Commons …
13 Many of them go through the freedom of Grendon , only to be returned to the rough and tumble of ordinary jails to finish their sentences .
14 In both content and form there was a parallel shift from the classical and idealized to the every-day and contingent .
15 He was master mason to the prior and chapter of Canterbury by 1496 , but was also active in Cambridge , where he worked at King 's Hall and on Great St Mary 's church .
16 Between 50 and 80 per cent of broiler chickens ( selected for fast growth and meat ) raised under intensive conditions have leg and bone defects , according to the Agricultural and Food Research Council .
17 They had climbed all over him in Tatton Park , looked at Granada TV studio sets with him , been with him to the Industrial and Air Museums .
18 EC agricultural production continued to grow despite the tendency of workers to move from the land to the industrial and service sectors .
19 COUSIN BOBBY In and around filming The Silence Of The Lambs , Jonathan Demme was also putting together a cinematic portrait of his long-lost cousin , Robert Castle , a Harlem preacher , minister to the oppressed and scourge of City Hall .
20 Construction : shingle construction — sections of fibre are sewn to the outer and liner and overlaid to eliminate any cold spots .
21 The nineteenth century had brought mass production in the wake of its industrial revolution , and this reversion to the home-made and hand hewn was a natural reaction .
22 The propaganda effort is very low-key compared to the diplomatic and trading activities discussed in chapter 6 and in general appears to be intended to complement them .
23 While this perspective was offered as an alternative to the moral and disease models of child abuse , which tend to dominate ‘ lay ’ and ‘ expert ’ thinking on the subject , it is only one of a number of possible sociological approaches .
24 The smaller of them seemed to stare at her a moment , then turn to the other and nod .
25 The camera was passed to the other and walking was regained with added vigour .
26 There was free distribution of milk to the poor and broth to the sick in the villages nearby , and an almshouse was established , modelled on those which Nicholas had seen in Holland .
27 He shows the typical standard of human forgiveness and in so doing mirrors exactly the attitude of the Pharisees and Scribes to the poor and outcast of Jesus ' day .
28 So the Southern lost its lines west of Salisbury to the Western , the Western gave up its lines in the West Midlands to the London Midland , the Eastern surrendered its access to Manchester , and the London Midland gave up to the Eastern and North Eastern its Yorkshire lines .
29 Their biographies provide us with access to the professional and class alliances which fed into the politics of mid-Victorian social reform .
30 " Every employer and every worker has the right to belong freely to the professional and trade union organisation of their choice . "
  Next page