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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 However , a detailed examination in the early 1980s of nearly 1,000 coffins of the period 1730–1860 in the vaults of Christchurch , Spitalfields , revealed a wealth of information previously unrecorded .
2 They were certainly not affixed to the merchandise as labels in the same way that some furniture makers and picture framers did , as a recent examination of some one thousand coffins in the vaults at Christchurch , Spitalfields , has proved .
3 A very fine light green velvet — almost eau-de-Nil — was seen on a child 's coffin in the vaults at St Paul 's , Shadwell , and made all the more attractive with its gilt furniture .
4 A number of cases of this type were noticed at Christchurch , Spitalfields , and St Marylebone parish church as well as in the vaults beneath St Paul 's , Shadwell , and St John 's , Wapping .
5 In her later novels Brooke-Rose uses techniques such as these to integrate different discourses , but in The Languages of Love linguistic transgression signals a lack of honesty and integrity .
6 In ‘ Self-Confrontation and the Writer ’ she describes her life as a series of ‘ splits ’ , and the allegorical mapping of language to identity hinted at in The Languages of Love is elaborated :
7 Hussein in The Languages of Love is a Muslim , yet it is he who reveals to Julia the beauty of genuine love expressed in honest language which leads her to convert to Catholicism .
8 It combines the transgression of narrative convention that begins to be manifest in The Sycamore Tree with a variation on the technique of recontextualization through linguistic slips employed in The Languages of Love .
9 Like the pun in The Languages of Love and the concept of a variable reality in The Sycamore Tree , a discursive practice that is devalued and stigmatized in this novel is later used as a tool for exploring the practices and attitudes it represents .
10 The same metaphor is employed in The Languages of Love , but rather than representing tragic alienation as it does there , here it acts as a principle of formal and thematic patterning .
11 Whereas in The Languages of Love the pun is indicative of the tragic breach between the human and the divine , in Thru it is described as ‘ free , anarchic , a powerful instrument to explode the civilization of the sign and all its stable , reassuring definitions ’ ( 29/607 ) .
12 Are these categories of thought manifest in the languages of advocacy and judgment within public law ?
13 She was passionately interested in politics and most of all in the personnel of politics , and she had cultivated a limited group of Labour politicians who , with her , were rightly described as Harold Wilson 's ‘ Kitchen Cabinet ’ .
14 But it was now clear that depression had a biochemical basis , even if its original causes lay in heredity and in the experiences of life .
15 The willingness to share in the experiences of patients ; to share their sense of loss , disappointment , anger and grief and the spiritual anguish which can challenge the way they have thought , perhaps believed and behaved in the past , can add to your nursing care much more than withdrawing from or denying such experience .
16 For the next three centuries Spencers were at home in the palaces of Kensington , Buckingham and Westminster as they occupied various offices of State and Court .
17 Dancing masters gradually developed the classical technique from European folk dance which they first changed into the elegant steppings of courtiers in the palaces of Italian and Spanish kings and prelates .
18 Petra 's new hotel , built outside the Siq , is run by an Englishman who cut his catering teeth in the palaces of Saudi Arabia .
19 Then there are the negative effects , and it is these which have been stressed in the warnings of computer scientists , university doctors , and in the various confessions of ex-hackers .
20 This type of suicide believes that he will survive his own death , witness the discovery of his own body , and participate in the reactions of others towards his death .
21 CRP was added to a final concentration of 0.6 ng/µl , cAMP to a final concentration of 50 µM , CytR was added to a final concentration of 3.3 ng/µl in the reactions in lanes 4 and 9 , and a final concentration of 44 ng/µl in the reactions in lanes 5 and 10 .
22 CRP was added to a final concentration of 0.6 ng/µl , cAMP to a final concentration of 50 µM , CytR was added to a final concentration of 3.3 ng/µl in the reactions in lanes 4 and 9 , and a final concentration of 44 ng/µl in the reactions in lanes 5 and 10 .
23 In the lands of Men things went no better .
24 That Burhaneddin Herevi may have had , or gained through this event , some official standing , however , is suggested by the reference to him in the biography of Molla Husrev as " multi in the lands of Rum " , a more precise title than is otherwise encountered except in the case of Molla Fenari .
25 The ‘ vision of things ’ is there in the Ring , in the scenes of conflict and temptation , in the characters ' words and attitudes , in proverbs and in prophecies and in the very narrative mode itself .
26 In the scenes before battle Hal and Westmoreland address Falstaff in affectionate prose ( IV.ii.49ff. ) , and on the eve of battle Hal still shares that medium with his old crony ( V.i.121ff . ) .
27 Drawn entirely from the Metropolitan 's permanent collection , the objects came to the museum in the bequests of Nelson A. Rockefeller ( 1979 ) and Jane Costello Goldberg ( from her husband Arnold 's collection ; 1987 ) , acquired by these New York collectors prior to the establishment of U.S. import restrictions of Pre-Columbian objects from Peru .
28 Maybe not , but he puts words in the mouths of people who wish they were .
29 In the mouths of sexists , language can still be sexist .
30 This school of thought emerges from the low numbers of cichlid fry which are found in the mouths of cichlids which are incubating the Synodontis .
  Next page