Example sentences of "in [art] [noun sg] [verb] a " in BNC.
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1 | Taking each of his subject categories in turn he divides the total annual issues by the number of books in the category to achieve a nominal figure of the average number of issues per book . |
2 | Students from Tibet studying in the capital held a brief demonstration against the Han Chinese treatment of their nation and people , as did a group of Uighurs from Xinjiang province . |
3 | WHILE ITS successor , London Fields , a classist , sexist , very cinematic yarn of femmes fatales , darts and death in the capital awaits a buyer , Money 's comedy of '80s excess just awaits a budget . |
4 | Clearly , the brutal war culture so enthusiastically expressed in the West finds a mirror in the resistance to US hegemony . |
5 | At the same time , developments in the West encouraged a resurgence of non-Soviet radicalism . |
6 | Equally important was the fact that various ideas and fashions developed in the West answered a native need for new forms of expression . |
7 | Therefore , will my right hon. Friend meet with his opposite number in the Treasury to agree a much lower figure for the premium rates of ECGD ? |
8 | The lack of enthusiasm for social expenditure in the Treasury produced a remarkable lack of foresight in such matters . |
9 | We came up with the idea of attaching nose rings to all our players and getting someone in the kop to give a hefty tug when necessary . |
10 | Several items in the inventory require a technical explanation . |
11 | Consolidated financial statements are prepared on the basis that the undertakings included in the consolidation form a single entity ( ‘ the group' ) . |
12 | But at that time Langer and Graham were bogeying and they had to birdie the last in the finish to force a playoff . |
13 | After a few days it may go onto their chest or settle in the liver causing a bilious fever and even jaundice . |
14 | He twisted in the saddle to see a column of infantry at the crossroads of Quatre Bras . |
15 | Each deviation is then squared ; the sum of these values is called the sample sum of the squares and is divided by the number n of items in the sample giving a quantity called the sample variance . |
16 | Each deviation is then squared ; the sum of these values is called the sample sum of the squares and is divided by the number n of items in the sample giving a quantity called the sample variance . |
17 | Businesses in the sample reported a typical three-stage learning process : ‘ The first phase of learning involves the basic ‘ driving ’ skills : the use of CAD as little other than an electronic pencil . ’ |
18 | The figure of 22.8% of claims at the low rate in the sample is higher than the rate for Berkshire as a whole ( 14.8% ) in the same period because the largest practice in the sample used a deputy for 53% of its night visits . |
19 | But here in the valley lies a completely different countryside , smaller and more delicate . |
20 | Members of the DHAC showed their distaste for the Nationalists when Councillor James Doherty and some Nationalist supporters in the gallery created a disturbance . |
21 | Each line in the diagram represents a relationship . |
22 | The Bull Court at Knossos is not well preserved , but it is possible that a fence of some kind ran round its edge ; a fragment of fresco found in the Labyrinth shows a strongly made three-rail wooden fence with a priestess or attendant leaning on it , watching the spectacle . |
23 | It was common practice in the company to use a blow torch on a pipe . |
24 | If the land was revalued and stated in the balance sheet at its current market price this would of course result in the company making a book profit . |
25 | Dr Gerard Vaughan , a former health minister , was especially vocal in condemning the action , but others took the view that the ‘ informer ’ in the case had a duty to report an action which possibly constituted a crime against another human being ; |
26 | the complexity of the law enables them to discover loopholes and multiple meanings in the vague and often ambiguous wording of corporate law(s) — the pursuit of each interpretation is a further delay in the case reaching a conclusion ; |
27 | The basis for this offer is the fact known by the cops and the criminals that the judge in the case has a history of giving reduced sentences and often clemency to guilty criminals who truly show remorse ; the judge also believes that co-operation with the police is proof that a criminal regrets his behaviour . |
28 | But he accepted the Restoration , though striving in the Convention to ensure a moderate religious settlement . |
29 | The expectation that students with A or B ( or their equivalents in other systems for dispensing approval ) will be in the minority has a strong hold in classrooms . |
30 | It 's believed that up to fifty Britons could be involved in the siege involving a heavily armed religious group in Texas . |