Example sentences of "with [art] [adv] [verb] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The combined choirs sustained the joyful mood with the aptly chosen hymns . |
2 | The following year his position at the tents was formally united with the newly created office of master of the revels . |
3 | It seemed like only yesterday that he had presented himself at Manchester 's Ringway Airport for training with the newly formed Parachute Regiment . |
4 | On the other hand in the early and mid-1960s the Americans remained determined to push ahead with the newly formulated strategy of flexible response . |
5 | But on his recent visit to the Mission base he was prevented from meeting with the newly contacted group . |
6 | A distinctive form of dress , essentially egalitarian , was adopted by both cyclist and hiker , consisting of an open-necked khaki shirt : , a jacket finished with the newly invented zip fastener , short trousers and a Basque beret . |
7 | The content of the NBC programmes has ceased to be lifeless with the newly acquired freedom to debate facts and events without fear of reprisals . |
8 | The content of the NBC programmes has ceased to be lifeless with the newly acquired freedom to debate facts and events without fear of reprisals . |
9 | Under the banner of industrial democracy various changes have been proposed in the structure of the organisation , decision-making and ownership of companies , involving things such as compulsory councils and co-determination at the shop-floor level , the representation of workers on the board , and most recently ( in Sweden and Holland ) the setting up of a union-controlled wage-earners ' fund by capitalising a percentage of pretax profits , with the newly issued shares being placed in the fund and used to acquire interests in other companies and to supplement wages in the lowest-paid jobs . |
10 | THE trouble with the newly published list of the richest women in Britain is that it only confirms men 's worst prejudices . |
11 | It is a small step to suppose that such effects might also operate when a stimulus is presented in compound not with another that is physically present but with the associatively activated representation of such an event . |
12 | More importantly , she continued to struggle with the increasingly demanding role of Mrs Hoffman . |
13 | Also , in association with the Partially Sighted Society , special adaptations were made . |
14 | Season generously with the freshly ground pepper , then serve with plenty of crusty French or Italian bread . |
15 | The pair of them had probably not been having an affair for long — only perhaps after Kemp 's long infatuation with the semi-permanently sozzled Sheila had begun to wear off . |
16 | in practical trials with the theoretically predicted number , for buckets holding five , ten , twenty and fifty records . |
17 | To explain this idea it is easiest to start with the well established structure of game theory . |
18 | For the present , if we extract the uniquely individual characteristics from the equation ( abilities , experience , goals ) then we are left with the well known equation : |
19 | Their decisions , together with the previously announced siting of the 1995 World Cup in South Africa , became the principal business of the Board 's annual meeting , which ended here yesterday . |
20 | This sketch is concerned only with the framework of the solid objects , no attempt is made to suggest blocks of light and shade as this would inhibit the application of paint to these pre-defined areas , denying the paint its freedom to run , bleed and react with the previously described qualities of the paper . |
21 | This sketch is concerned only with the framework of the solid objects , no attempt is made to suggest blocks of light and shade as this would inhibit the application of paint to these pre-defined areas , denying the paint its freedom to run , bleed and react with the previously described qualities of the paper . |
22 | In tomorrow 's lunchtime Scotland Today Kevin Kline talks about stardom and fatherhood , and Shereen , Kirsty and Jim will be back at six thirty with the most watched news programme in Scotland . |
23 | Its coat is whole wheat ( light or dark ) , sometimes with white patches , and many animals of the breed were crossed with the closely related Guernsey ( see Channel Islands section ) . |
24 | The tendency for distinctions between labour and management to appear less overt connects with the widely expressed view that class consciousness is not important to the Japanese . |
25 | To Adam Smith each trade had its " peculiar infirmity " , and the economist was familiar with the widely selling translation of the classic work by Bernard Ramazzini , De Morbis Artificum Diatriba , which added to the diagnostic list the question : " what occupation does he follow ? … |
26 | In the United States , Margaret Ribble ( 1943 ) published The Rights of Infants ; in England John Bowlby ( 1952 ) followed up his earlier studies of maternal deprivation as an antecedent of what he had called ‘ the affectionless character ’ ( 1946 ) with his report for the World Health Organization , Maternal Care and Mental Health ; and in the opening volume of the journal Psycho-Analytic Study of the Child , Rene Spitz ( 1945 ) published his paper on hospitalized infants and the effects of lack of mothering , and supported this with the widely circulated documentary film , Grief : a Peril in Infancy . |
27 | It is sometimes obscure and the writer confesses with some shame that he possessed for some forty years a Tudor binding with the cunningly interwoven initials ‘ R.B. ’ — those of an unidentified London binder working c.1550–81 . |
28 | ( b ) Registered land You will be expected to collect the land or charge certificate together with the duly signed transfer . |
29 | Any spare capacity would deal only with local waste — a policy that Du Pont believes is ‘ aligned with the clearly expressed views or responsible political and community leaders ’ . |
30 | ‘ It 's the Best Exercise ! ’ was what she yelled at Robert every time the Dobermann came for Badger at about thirty miles an hour with the clearly expressed intention of biting his head off . |