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

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1 It is not surprising to find , underlying the judgments of all the experienced Queen 's Bench judges who have grappled with this problem , a feeling of acute concern about the situation thus revealed .
2 The new large hall also provided the opportunity for the formation of a very active Bowling Club as well as offering further scope for the activities of all the young people 's organizations .
3 The activities of all the processing elements are handled by up to two 128Mb control processers , with long instruction word RISC processors and transfer rates of 2.1Gbps .
4 Without going as far as The Unfortunates , the forms of all the novels mentioned introduce a comparable questioning of conventional patterns and expectations , often heightened by the novelists ' explicit commentary on their own activity .
5 The Atlantic Agreement called " upon the Seamen of all the world for service … to demonstrate practical appreciation of freedom won " , and the American Shipping Act of 1915 had established for seamen on foreign ships a " a right to quit " while in US ports from March 1916 .
6 How could he possibly be associated with the excesses of such a raggle-taggle outfit ?
7 Secondly , the marketers of such a financial product often need more than the lifestyle information can provide on its own .
8 The patterns of all the estimated effects are the same , but they are less pronounced .
9 Their early attempts to create some kind of political unity from the scores of minor clans , each under its own chieftain or župan , were continually beset by difficulties arising from the attempts of both the Byzantines and Bulgars to dominate them .
10 The flight safety officials receive reports from their own flight crews and engineering staff , and keep checks on operational irregularities and monitor the investigations of all the flight safety incidents such as engine shut-downs in flight , selection of emergency systems , component failure in flight and procedural shortcomings .
11 Schools should certainly be accountable , especially to parents and pupils , but one of the dangers of such a competitive approach to education is that the benefits of cooperation between schools and across LEAs will be lost .
12 The beginnings of cable and satellite policy showed the dangers of such a fragmentary approach .
13 Although this procedure speeds up the meeting , the dangers of such a course of action should be realised .
14 What are the dangers of such a distribution arrangement to :
15 The dangers of such an approach have been seen in comparable work with children and families .
16 The dangers of such an approach can be seen at its most extreme in Gordon Rattray Taylor 's neo-Freudian interpretation of Sex in History : ‘ The history of civilisation is the history of a long warfare between the dangerous and powerful drives and the systems of taboos and inhibitions which man has erected to control them ’ .
17 As has been pointed out in Chapter Two , an integrated education programme should be based on the views of all the people participating in the various educational processes , but the final success of a given course depends , to a large extent , on the motivation of the students .
18 Chair , what will , what will happen is that er , there 're , there are meetings planned for the Policy Panel on the twenty fourth and twenty fifth of January which will hear the views of all the committees in response to , to the request for P and R , that , that would then be translated into a final proposal for the budget cuts , which will go to the meeting of the Policy and Resources in February .
19 Ungulates can be found in the grasslands of all the major continents except Australia .
20 Audubon , however , was outraged : ‘ Here there are at present three Works publishing on the Birds of Europe ’ , he wrote to his friend Rev. Bachman , from London in 1835 , ’ — one by Mr Gould and the others by no one knows who — at least I do not know — Works on the Birds of all the World are innumerable — Cheap as dirt and more dirty than dirt … ’
21 In the complexities of such a situation the International Rugby Board obviously should not rely on SARB and SARU to achieve unity before they are to announce who will host the Rugby World Cup in 1995 .
22 The gradual acceptance of the germ theory of infection , following the research of Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch into viruses and vaccines in the 1870s and 1880s , had resulted in the rapid isolation of the bacilli of all the major infectious diseases .
23 Above all , August is a month to take some time out to relax in the garden and reap the rewards of all the hard work you put in earlier in the season .
24 Brush the surfaces of all the cakes with apricot glaze .
25 ‘ an appointed representative whose principal … is a member of such an organisation … and is subject to the rules of such an organisation … in carrying on the investment business in respect of which his principal … has accepted responsibility for his activities ; …
26 ‘ an appointed representative whose principal … is a member of ( a recognised self-regulating organisation ) and is subject to the rules of such an organisation … in carrying on the investment business in respect of which his principal or each of his principals has accepted responsibility for his activities ; …
27 The phrase ‘ is subject to the rules of such an organisation ’ qualify the principal in that case , not the appointed representative .
28 FULL employment was reinstated as a central aim of Labour 's economic recovery programme by Mr Kinnock yesterday as he pledged to ‘ mobilise the talents of all the people ’ in an education and training revolution .
29 To be plausible the authority should also be limited in the way ours is : a machine that appeared certain , in the teeth of all the evidence observable by us , that such and such a transistor was failing might well have given itself away precisely because it would lack the ‘ downwards ’ inscrutability that our inner workings have for us .
30 Yet the price of certainty in this sense would be to reduce the competence of the initial decision-maker to a mere factfinder , to deny any weight to its opinion on the interpretation of the constituent parts of the X question , and to embroil the courts in the minutiae of all the elements which comprise the conditions of jurisdiction .
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