Example sentences of "of [noun sg] in [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | It will be overseeing the installation of a small-scale hydro-electric generating scheme bringing heating and lighting to the village of Mango in the foothills of the Karakoram range . |
2 | She did a good deal of field-work in the pubs of commuterland , achieving in her story ‘ Summer Schools ’ ( also in the 1958 volume ) an almost ‘ Gothic ’ horror . |
3 | Unless we show that we are determined to proceed with the deployment of cruise and Pershing missiles , there will be no chance of progress in the arms control talks . |
4 | Last night Alastair Morton , the British co-chairman of Eurotunnel , said the banks could be driven to this ‘ by sheer exasperation through lack of progress in the talks ’ . |
5 | His work was frequently illustrated , not only in magazines but also in books ; in William Johnstone 's Creative Art in Britain ( 1950 ) , in Herbert Read 's small but significant survey , Contemporary British Art ( 1951 ) , and in Wyndham Lewis 's The Demon of Progress in the Arts ( 1954 ) where his large painting of the dice-playing soldiers in the Crucifixion scene , The Gamblers ( Colour Plate XX ) , was reproduced with the observation : ‘ The symbolic power of John Minton 's picture requires no comment . ’ |
6 | Heads of state and government of the 12 member countries of the European Communities ( EC ) met in Luxembourg on June 28-29 to take stock of progress in the negotiations on economic and monetary union ( EMU ) and European political union ( EPU ) which had opened at the Rome summit in December 1990 [ see pp. 37905-06 ] . |
7 | No sense of urgency or enthusiasm here , just as there had been no promise of support in the seamen 's ballot of the previous June . |
8 | By the judicious application of support in the areas where it could be most effective , government has done a great deal for the industry . |
9 | ‘ Poor Irene , and poor David ; he 's going to need a lot of support in the weeks to come . ’ |
10 | The freight operation , which received over £50million of support in the mid-1980s , is set to make profits of £22million in the current year and £50 million by 1992/93 . |
11 | When asked about the admissibility of change in the heavens , Cardinal Carlo Conti replied that the Bible did not support Aristotle . |
12 | Despite the fact that the Criminal Law Revision Committee and the Policy Advisory Committee have recently considered the question of homosexuality , there appears to be little possibility of change in the conditions of lawful homosexual conduct . |
13 | We showed him two films , and gave him evidence of change in the motives of men affecting trouble spots and putting things to rights , socially and politically in many parts of the world . |
14 | And the reason for a , a lot of fashion and a lot of change in the fashions , one of the reasons is because these men had , needed some way of showing off their wealth . |
15 | The only mode of change in the rules known to such a society will be the slow process of growth , whereby courses of conduct once thought optional become first habitual or usual , and then obligatory , and the converse process of decay , when deviations , once severely dealt with , are first tolerated and then pass unnoticed . |
16 | It locates casework within a planned programme of change in the lifestyles , choice , and opportunities of people who need — and can be helped to benefit from — such change . |
17 | However , it is not justifiable to discuss a problem from the angle of insanity if there is no indication of insanity in the facts of the problem . |
18 | In John Ray 's The wisdom of God manifested in the works of creation ( 1691 ) , there was a sense of exultation in the wonders of nature . |
19 | A loss of expertise in the areas of sexual assaults , child offences and missing persons--previously the province of policewomen . |
20 | 2 ) Lack of expertise in the branches |
21 | The result was all wrong … 6-2 on aggregate to Tranmere but there was a flicker of hope in the flames as United 's cup run went up in smoke … |
22 | To the south , a large estate has closed off a public right of way because of vandalism in the woods where pheasant are bred for shooting . |
23 | Importation seems the most likely answer for many of these metals , but the existence of scrap in the forms of late Roman silver coinage , plate and , increasingly , Germanic silver may easily have satisfied the demand . |
24 | The less simple translation is that the battle continues between economic reformists and those hardliners , led politically by the prime minister , Li Peng , and ideologically by the 86-year-old Chen Yun , who believe that quick reform leads only too quickly to bourgeois liberalisation and peaceful evolution — witness the student democrats in 1989 in Beijing 's Tiananmen Square and the collapse of communism in the countries of Eastern Europe . |
25 | This is one of the best examples of allegory in the Gospels . |
26 | Most memorably , Warr declares his belief in the ability of the common people to secure their own liberation : ‘ There are some sparks of freedom in the minds of most ’ , he wrote , ‘ which ordinarily lie deep and are covered in the dark as a spark in the ashes . ’ |
27 | The only published study that can be directly compared with the Gardner report is that by Mc Laughlin et al on workers at nuclear facilities in Ontario ; they found no increased risk of leukaemia in the children of fathers working in these facilities . |
28 | Employment and exposure records date from before the occurrence of leukaemia in the children , and the link to industry files was done by industry staff who did not know who were the parents of cases and who were the parents of controls . |
29 | The students give it liveliness : motorbikes in the market square and a bit of noise in the bars . |
30 | The team also found that long term potentiation led to the persistent elevation of cAMP in the cells , while short term potentiation was associated with only a transient elevation of cAMP . |