Example sentences of "of [art] [det] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For example , Arty McGlynn ( right ) is just one of the many premier musicians who can be found playing regularly at Sally O'Brien 's in Omagh , Co .
2 Most notably these have included , first , a concern with income distribution and the need to combat ‘ absolute ’ poverty , triggered by McNamara in 1973 ; and second , the need to finance the trade deficits , and consequent ‘ adjustment ’ , of the many African countries for whom the second oil price rise of 1979 was a near fatal blow .
3 We welcome the Government 's increasing desire to gain a better quantitative understanding of the many environmental impacts of minerals activity through its research programme .
4 We welcome the Government 's increasing desire to gain a better quantitative understanding of the many environmental impacts of minerals activity through its research programme .
5 General Hodge thus had the first of the many tempestuous scenes in which he was to be involved with Rhee over the next two years .
6 We were entertained most generously both in people 's homes and in some of the many splendid restaurants .
7 Of the 121 Winterhalters the bevy of bathing beauties in ‘ Florinda ’ is a must , and I suppose ‘ The First of May 1851 ’ , the most touching of the many splendid family portraits .
8 The Treasurer 's room was all dark teak furniture and the walls were hung with portraits of the top men in the Corporation , unlike the walls of Mark 's office which were covered with coloured aerial photographs of the many European component plants which had come within his planning responsibility .
9 Of the many interweaving strands within this extensive topic he concentrates primarily on the way artists have deployed scientific ideas and instruments — these connections constitute ‘ the science of art ’ of his title — — while he also encompasses a number of related themes .
10 Feast on an endless range of local and international dishes , then dance the night away in one of the many pulsating discos .
11 This is a survivor of the many small country mills , the majority of which have long disappeared .
12 The government policy is to expand the total number of beds in the island to around 20,000 and to encourage this expansion to be outside Funchal , thereby opening up the wonderful countryside and expanding the economy of the many small villages .
13 Next moment , he emerged into one of the many small clearings scattered about the forest .
14 The ready availability of good-quality building stone in most parts of Scotland , the lack of timber in many northern areas , and the need to protect against strong winds and abundant rain , are a few of the many practical considerations which have had an important effect on the nature of Scottish buildings .
15 This section discusses some of the many separate factors that affect the decision .
16 Two people can hear the same news report , yet one ‘ hears ’ that the world is full of conflict and hatred , and another hears of the many global efforts towards love , peace and harmony .
17 The court said that to import proportionality would ‘ create a monster that could quickly get out of control and cause widespread disruption of the many administrative processes that might attract its application ’ .
18 So persistent was the language that it had become no more remarkable than just another wayward manner of speaking and their sons paid so little attention to it that it might well have been one of the many private languages of love .
19 After the Equine swimming pool or one of the other places of special interest , a visit to one of the many private training stables in the town is followed by a guided tour of either the National Stud or one of the world famous Studs in the area .
20 We began our afternoon walk from Spyway , one of the many tiny villages hidden deep in the softly rolling hills of ancient Dorset .
21 FAR LEFT An aerial view of the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge , England , with snow highlighting not just the stones , but some of the many associated earthworks .
22 Rows of the many splendoured jugs which became something of a trademark in her work dangle from the ceiling beams , and one of her own last canvases from the 1980s rests on a paint-splattered easel at the window .
23 These poor folk , whose lack of privilege is just one of the many thrusting reasons that have sent me to the bosom , not to mention the buttocks , of today 's quite heavenly Labour Party , may find that my pronunciamentos become somewhat impenetrable once past the ninth , tenth , or even twenty-third of their constituent subordinate clauses , so that the very juicy and surprisingly supple points that I make are lost amidst their attendant persiflage .
24 A summary of the many descriptive terms used in petrologic identification of cement morphology is given in Fig. 5.25 .
25 The assumption is based on religious writings , which in their turn are probably based on the primitive beliefs which early man formulated in pursuance of that almost uncontrollable urge to find something beyond himself to which he could ascribe the origins of the many mysterious things around him .
26 I confess that in spite of the many negative sides I can see to you I would have expected you to be good management material . ’
27 In a rare survey of local residents ' attitudes , the Kariels ( 1982 ) have found that in spite of the many negative aspects often ascribed to tourism , the overall evaluation of local inhabitants was strongly positive , although at the same time they wanted the landscape to retain its traditional character and felt that family life had been weakened by tourism .
28 It was certainly not one of the many studied effects which Paul had variously condemned as ‘ ludicrous ’ , ‘ over the top ’ , ‘ outrageous ’ , ‘ dingy ’ , or — most damaging of all — ‘ silly ’ .
29 The Rev. Charles A. Berry was one of the many Nonconformist ministers to visit America : in 1887 , on his second visit , he had preached at Beecher 's Plymouth Church , a visit organized before the American 's death .
30 The haulier should seek expert advice from one of the many financial advisers advertising their services in the press when credit over £15,000 is required .
  Next page