Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] era " in BNC.

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1 He ushered in a new era in the study of religion and of theology ; he brought a new conception of what the disciplined and ordered study of both could be ; he underlined in epoch-making fashion the importance of the subjective aspect of religious awareness , pointing to what lies deeper than intellectual formulations , yet is not reducible to inchoate and diffuse ‘ feelings ’ ; he attempted to grasp and express in an original and modern way the abiding significance of Jesus , and to uncover the living and personal meaning of what were in danger of being dismissed as merely the fossilised accretions of doctrine .
2 Just as the 1972 Conference on the Environment and Development in Stockholm is said to have ushered in a new era of international cooperation ( at the very least , it led to the creation of the United National Environment Programme ) , so its 1992 successor could just provide all world leaders with some kind of working map for the future .
3 It ushered in a new era in the history of mankind , inaugurating the construction of socialism in an area covering one sixth of the globe .
4 Believing that architectural beauty derived largely from functional and structural efficiency , Anderson constantly attacked the exponents of the Scots Baronial style , and thus ushered in a new era of refinement in Scottish architecture .
5 In 1964 publication of Fluvial Processes in Geomorphology ( Leopold , Wolman and Miller , 1964 ) ushered in a new era of process investigations .
6 Then with the utilization of satellites when satellite climatology ushered in a new era which Barrett ( 1974 ) has characterized as providing observing systems of the earth and atmosphere , as highly convenient data collection platforms , and as connection links between widely spaced ground stations between which large daily exchanges of weather data must take place .
7 His defeat at Culloden in 1746 ushered in a fearsome era of repression and violent change in the North ; and nowhere was this new order felt more savagely than in nineteenth-century Strathnaver .
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