Example sentences of "reserved for [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The government of the FRG … is of the opinion that a final decision on any public compensation must be reserved for a future all-German parliament . "
2 These qualities were reserved for a small minority of disinterested intellectuals whose insights into the great tradition of literature were said to develop in them a maturity of vision .
3 The place of the formal legal process — prosecution — is transformed in this compliance system from the public , occasionally dramatic , but quite conventional response in a sanctioning system to a rarity reserved for a small , highly selected number of cases .
4 Underlining the importance of the occasion , Leslie Waddington has made available both his corner space and his main gallery , usually reserved for a changing display of the dealer 's stock of modern masterpieces .
5 His dark brows rose in astonishment at this attack and then he slid his arms round her and pulled her towards him , looking down at her with the sort of expression a grown-up reserved for a naughty child .
6 These seem to have been designed to be worn on the finger , although the oval design-disc was so big as to he unwieldy ; possibly they were normally worn on a string round the neck , or simply reserved for a leisured elite .
7 In these circumstances an election campaign was to be waged with the same zeal which would otherwise be reserved for a parliamentary election .
8 Further formal monitoring should then be reserved for a defined mid-point and the trial end .
9 The Ground Floor should be reserved for a permanent exhibition on the work of the Garden .
10 Final ratification can be reserved for a satisfactory outcome of the debate .
11 This term was reserved for the rural dialects , which had been legitimized by nineteenth-century investigations , and which were believed to be ‘ genuine ’ in a way that urban dialects are not .
12 Even with the fame of Dom Pérignon in the seventeenth century the name Champagne was strictly reserved for the still wines , although the slightly pétillant wines were also included .
13 She said : ‘ I think Darlington council could make some extra money by wheel-clamping cars which park illegally in spaces reserved for the disabled . ’
14 He pointed out that under the proposals an extra 42 places would be reserved for the disabled in Abbot 's Yard , near High Row and Skinnergate .
15 About 50 parking spaces were reserved for the disabled in Abbot 's Yard car park , Houndgate , Horsemarket and Raby Terrace , said Coun. Robinson .
16 Soon the great awards of knighthoods give way to the decorations reserved for the civil and military services , and the shuffle of office workers is broken only by the occasional clink of a cavalryman 's spur .
17 This arises chiefly from the fact , that by unconscious tacit agreement , as well as with outspoken conscious determination , the working-people 's quarters are sharply separated from the sections of the city reserved for the middle-class
18 Hoving proved his own worst enemy , and eventually his taste for the tinsel and show of the art world overtook whatever feeling he had for the art itself , and he left the museum after his cherished Arts Communication Center ( to be funded by Walter Annenberg , with Hoving as its head ) , a nebulous film-studio-cum-information centre to be built in gallery space reserved for the European decorative arts department , was dissolved after much local criticism .
19 Upon his death Charles 's eldest son assumed responsibility , and anxious evidently to enlarge the sphere of the firm 's activities he took an " option " or " take-note " from the Honourable John Pennington Bart. , Lord Muncaster , which issued liberty to " … search for and get lead and Copper Ores & any other ores within the Manor of Little Langdale & Tilberthwaite ( save and except in certain parcel of Ground under a lease to Wilson & which Ground & Premises are to be reserved for the sole use & purpose of the said Wilson …
20 The sharp tongue is now reserved for the consciousness-raising rap session she gives at American universities , where students are allowed to ask whatever they like about her life , her sexuality , her views of the world , provided they can cope with the answers .
21 Moreover , Whitechapel neighboured on to Spitalfields , whose centre housed what was known as the ‘ black stuff ’ industry , the manufacture of the rich and expensive silks and velvets reserved for the exclusive use of the funerary trade .
22 But the main role of reminiscence in Grimes is reserved for the final interlude and the monologue which follows it .
23 But intelligence could not possibly be reserved for the washed and moneyed classes .
24 In Kaszubia , Mazowia and Silesia the peasants referred to themselves as Kaszuby , Mazury and Slęzaki rather than as Poles : Polak was a term reserved for the Polish nobility .
25 Tithes of reed were reserved for the local priest on the Somerset Levels , and Chaucer 's monk cast an entirely practical eye on the local birdlife : ‘ he liked a swan best , and roasted whole . ’
26 Secondary education was available for the more fortunate and higher education was reserved for the privileged few .
27 But Mr Desmond Fennell , QC , chairman of the Bar , claimed there was a danger that many people needing legal help would have access only to a ‘ more expensive Jack of all trades , ’ while specialist skills were reserved for the privileged few .
28 Some flights are night flights — when you arrive in the resort your room is immediately available , as it has been reserved for the whole night .
29 These men were the ministeriales , originally unfree tenants ; as the nobility became increasingly independent , the ministeriales were promoted to fill their place in the royal service , and they received increasingly valuable patronage and endowment ; abbots of imperial monasteries were even forbidden to distribute fiefs to free tenants — they were to be reserved for the unfree , the ministeriales .
30 The new legislation made it possible for all South Africans to purchase freehold tenure to the 87 per cent of South Africa 's land hitherto reserved for the white minority , although it placed no obligation on white owners to sell , and commentators pointed out that few blacks had the means to buy .
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