Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] [noun] [vb mod] " in BNC.
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1 | The slightest alteration in the chemical balance would result immediately in a race of exploded beetles . |
2 | A half-day Faraday Division symposium on Molecular beams in the chemical era will be held at the Scientific Societies ' Lecture Theatre commencing at 14.00 on Thursday 14 May 1992 . |
3 | ‘ Most others in the chemical industry would have been delighted to have them . ’ |
4 | No one in the Labour Party would want that ; the Party outside Parliament would be outraged ; the Sovereign would be seen , however unavoidably , to be taking sides . |
5 | Nevertheless there was some hope that the rifts in the Labour Party would produce some new combinations on the Left . |
6 | Our political allies in the Labour Party should spell out exactly what it means to work in an unsafe environment , and last but not least , we should push the message of the National Health and Safety Conference of last year , better safe than sorry . |
7 | No one in the Labour Party will ever forget the disastrous trade figures that dished Harold Wilson in the dying days of the 1970 campaign . |
8 | ‘ We in the Labour Party will settle for nothing less . ’ |
9 | That 's promotion in the Labour rank would you like to move the motion please Mr . |
10 | Funding was given to groups such as Lesbian and Gay Employment Rights and the Stonewall Housing Association , both of which were engaged in the kind of work that most people in the Labour movement could easily identify with . |
11 | And the means by which agents in the legal field can obtain this stake is through the accumulation of symbolic-legal capital , mostly in the form of institutional positions . |
12 | It might be thought that the crime of incest which covers parties who consent in the legal sense should not extend further than serious acts of penetration . |
13 | If we are troubled by the fact that the corporatist countervision we find hinted at in the legal materials might become simply a mask behind which corporate managers exercise unconstrained economic and social power , an alternative avenue for research is available to us . |
14 | Brown doubts Microsoft 's pledge to reduce it to 8Mb in the final release will produce a very usable system , certainly not one that could run multiple applications concurrently . |
15 | Advisers had in many cases given guarantees that the only information that they would use in the final report would be that which could be used in a public document . |
16 | In such cases the court must give proper weight to the child 's wishes , and be slow to reject them , but in the final analysis should be free to determine for itself what the child 's best interests require . |
17 | The verdict passed on people in the final judgment will be determined by the attitude they adopted to Christ during their lifetime ( Matt. |
18 | This is not only damaging to the final exam marks of the Student ( since a Student who had managed 60% in the Final Examination could fail because their End of Module Tests reduce the mark ) , but foolish , since they can take as many retakes of the End of Module Tests as they wish in order to achieve a good pass-mark . |
19 | Although particular areas and shapes are beginning to develop , this is still only the middle stage , creating the blocks of shadow from which the specific light and dark areas in the final stage will be found . |
20 | Although particular areas and shapes are beginning to develop , this is still only the middle stage , creating the blocks of shadow from which the specific light and dark areas in the final stage will be found . |
21 | Our early ancestors lived in a world fraught with danger ; yet they were far more advanced in the art of survival than many of us in the modern world could ever envisage . |
22 | Well , anything that you can do there , erm in in the immediate future would obviously be helpful , to support our case for being considered as the er the er European supplier , erm , and likewise with Italy , Spain , and France , not withstanding that at the moment they do n't do a great deal of business , well Spain does a great deal of business , but I do n't suppose is in a position to do much in in the way of technical support , erm , right , |
23 | Germany has decided that 90% of the costs of cleaning sites in the eastern states should be split between state and federal governments ; the new owner should carry only 10% of the costs . |
24 | This strategy assumes that a reciprocal rebalancing of power in the work' group will occur through the emergence of maintenance behaviours ; in fact , a very different set of relationships may emerge , and not without some intra-group conflict . |
25 | Perhaps some of his sexual attitudes were pungently those of his time and his class ; but who then in the nineteenth century shall escape whipping ? |
26 | The navy in the nineteenth century may have been an Insurance policy for free trade , but Pax Britannica was not something which could be taken for granted , even by Victorian Britons . |
27 | Understanding how the face of urban Britain emerged in the nineteenth century may pin-point how to tackle certain of the present problems , and , conceivably , identify the factors which set the die for urban life in the next century . |
28 | There is nothing surprising , therefore , in the fact that new conceptions should have been formulated — of the ‘ developmentalist ’ state , the ‘ interventionist ’ state , the particular forms of the state in ‘ industrial ’ or ‘ post-industrial ’ societies — or that political development in the twentieth century and its antecedents in the nineteenth century should have been reinterpreted in terms of democracy and totalitarianism , and of the rise of the nation state as well as the growth of the socialist movement . |
29 | In consequence , there has been the pretence that a single perspective grounded in the nineteenth century can capture the essentials of things today , and so constitutional theory has itself been frozen in a way that has confined the parameters of constitutional debate . |
30 | The Slovenes were under Austrian/German rule for most of their long history , from the Middle Ages until the twentieth century , yet they retained their distinct Slav culture ; their national revival in the nineteenth century could draw on a rich cultural heritage . |