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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Closing on the same day is the confrontation between the work of Carmelo Arden and Roger Desserprit made during the years of the association with the Madi group in the 1950s .
2 It follows that ‘ those sensations must be all that we can , at bottom , mean by their attributes ; and the distinction which we verbally make between the properties of things and the sensations we receive from them , must originate in the convenience of discourse rather than in the nature of what is signified by the terms ’ .
3 The claims which they make for the consequences of literacy belong to the same tradition .
4 At the end of period t - 1 the best guess any agent can make of the values of v t and t(z) t the aggregate and relative demand shocks in the coming period , is that they will be zero .
5 What will they make of the tips from the late 20th century ?
6 Nevertheless the extraordinary use MacMillan made of the traditions of the japanese theatre with its warlike ritual drills for selfdefence showed how much more masculine his choreographic design was then becoming .
7 ‘ Why do n't you apply the analysis you made of the Moslems to the Copts ? ’
8 What you said of Alexander Selkirk 's monologue , the good sense you made of the ramblings of my John Bunyan , your understanding of the passion of Iñez de Castro … gruesomely resurrecta … but that is enough of my egoistical mutter , and of those of my personae , who are not , as you so rightly remarked , my masks .
9 The advance was to have been made during the hours of darkness and across country , keeping away from the roads and lanes .
10 On 12 July 1330 , during the last months of their rule , the perambulations made during the reigns of Edward I and Edward 11 were ordered to be observed in every particular , and the Forest officers in Shropshire were forbidden to take any action against the owners of lands within the disafforested districts who had taken the deer or cut timber there .
11 The restrained decoration of chairs made during the reigns of Louis XV and Louis XVI gave way to more complicated ornamentation in the 19th century : fluted columns , pilasters and other architectural motifs ( inspired by classical Greek architecture ) characterised chairs of the early 19th-century directory period ( top left ) .
12 For example , distinctions often need to be made between the opinions of men and women , single people and married people , young people and old people .
13 Here we assess the importance of these contacts , and also of contacts that would be made between the C-helices of the protein and DNA in a previous model of the complex , by studying mutations aimed at disrupting them .
14 A contrast will be made between the conclusions of the public pollsters , who suggest an unqualified support exists for the British monarchy today , and a rhetorical analysis , which suggests a more complex reaction between explicit and implicit features .
15 In section 2.3.2 we made a distinction which is often made between the activities of banks or , more strictly , ‘ institutions comprising the monetary sector ’ and the activities of NBFIs .
16 For example , in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland a clear distinction must be made between the advantages of the central and eastern areas relative to the much poorer agricultural areas of the west and north .
17 The first issue is when a formal agreement should be made between the members of a band .
18 They argue that an important distinction is to be made between the capacities of capital and labour in recognising and acting on their best interests .
19 Such a suggestion makes sense when a comparison is made between the accounts with and without these verses .
20 267 , which came to the Privy Council just before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was created , provides a valuable illustration of the fact that in the absence of such arrangements as were made between the Inns of Court and the judges in this country , the power to judges to determine who were fit and proper persons to practise before them , where it existed , was regarded as essential for the due administration of justice .
21 If the intention was the same on both sides , the result , in my judgment , was that an agreement was made between the parties by implication .
22 He can only highlight the atmosphere supporting the plot , especially those circumstances where he has to portray differences between classes and thus general behaviour , idiosyncrasies , etc. , for example the contrast that must be made between the dances for all and sundry in the town square and those for the aristocrats in the ballroom of Romeo and Juliet .
23 The formal shouts of challenge and reply were made between the guards on the watchtowers and the approaching horsemen , and a moment later there were hooves clattering in the yard .
24 It is this confidence that is provided by Directory Integrity Check , since it allows a complete comparison to be made between the files in a directory/directory structure and their corresponding LIFESPAN modules .
25 Major claims have ben made for the benefits of the National Curriculum but much concern has also been expressed at possible negative effects on schools and children .
26 Here in May 1942 — before the raid on Dieppe that August — plans were being made for the landings in North Africa that would put an American Task Force ashore on the Atlantic coast near Casablanca , a second force ashore at Oran in the Mediterranean , and a third further east at Algiers .
27 Heat flow during the Carboniferous was estimated by assuming similar levels to the Jurassic with an allowance made for the effects of the Hercynian Orogeny in the late Carboniferous .
28 In fact , the quack cancer therapy laetrile is nothing more than apricot kernels , and although high-sounding claims were made for the effects of nature 's cyanide on rampant cells , laetrile has proved useless .
29 This implies that allowance must be made for the effects of changes in volume on price volatility when studying the volatility-maturity relationship .
30 We were told that although up to this point no account had been made for the effects of new policies , the counties were at liberty to estimate the effects of new policies — either theirs or the Government 's via planning policy guidance and the work of development agencies , TECs etc .
  Next page