Example sentences of "be [adv] [vb pp] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 The fact that the " adornment " theory was entertained for so long deserves some explanation and its appropriateness can not be altogether dismissed in the case of " artificial " styles cultivated by such Renaissance mannerists as Sidney and Lyly .
2 However , others , with apparently convincing exotic locations , can be wholly shot in the studio , with the aid of sophisticated scenery effects , often using a moving matte technique to achieve verisimilitude .
3 This does not mean that that intelligibility can be wholly captured in the formulations or in the mind of the theologian ; it does , however , mean that the divine intelligibility comes across to us , that God gives himself to be known and understood , and that the understanding that is made possible in theology is and is intended to be a genuine understanding and an authentic contact with the intelligibility of God .
4 The exercise of these powers can not be successfully challenged in the courts unless it can be shown that the Home Secretary has acted unreasonably or perversely .
5 Geoffrey Howe , the Chancellor of the Exchequer , and Leon Brittan , the Chief Secretary to the Treasury in overall charge of government spending , wanted to look at the longer-term trends and to see how public expenditure could be successfully controlled in the 1980s .
6 Current Cheltenham second favourite Mighty Mogul is likely to head the market here but , in a race that could be slowly run in the absence of an obvious front-runner , he is worth opposing .
7 No less than eighty-five per cent of the catering and retail outlets and eighty-four per cent of the accommodation establishments were found to be locally owned in the six locations where detailed research was done : Arundel , Broadway , Chipping Campden , Lavenham , Long Melford and Woodstock .
8 Citrine 's interventions largely succeeded because they were in general well-timed ; on issues on which he was utterly sure of the rightness of his cause ; and on ground which had been well prepared in advance by correspondence between officials at the BEA and the Ministry , so that the Minister 's brief could be effectively exploited in the discussion .
9 This was because many of the IT skills acquired on the Advanced Courses could be effectively used in a variety of business settings , eg programming or systems work .
10 If this glitch activity has continued over the lifetime of the pulsar , roughly 5% of the moment of inertia of the neutron star must now be effectively removed in the form of pinned vortices ; but according to current models , only 1% of the total moment of inertia is involved in the whole of the superfluid that interpenetrates the inner crust , where pinning might take place .
11 The only way to make sure your bra is exactly right for you is to be professionally fitted in a department store or specialist underwear shop .
12 It was essential that our recommendations should arouse enthusiasm among the best teachers ; if they disliked our plans , the National Curriculum would never be properly implemented in the classroom .
13 But the significance of the political and religious events of the mid sixteenth century , and in particular Mary 's part in shaping them , can only be properly understood in the context of the traditional political and social patterns which had created the sixteenth-century Scottish kingdom .
14 One of the recommendations of The Library Association Working Party on Training was that ‘ training is an integral activity in the achievement of a library system 's objectives and this should be properly recognised in the allocation of resources ’ .
15 These however , must be properly noted in the documentation circulated afterwards .
16 This can only be properly tested in a laboratory , but all dyes used today are both permanent and colour-fast .
17 ( 2 ) Granting the application , that the central objective of the category of public interest immunity involved was the maintenance of an honourable , disciplined , law-abiding and uncorrupt police force ; that therefore , in view of the public disquiet understandably aroused by proven malpractice of some members of the disbanded West Midlands Serious Crime Squad , and of the extensive publicity already attaching to the authority 's documents following B. 's successful appeal , it could not be said that those who had co-operated in the authority 's investigation would regret that co-operation , or that future generations of potential witnesses would withhold it , if the court were to release the documents to the applicants to enable them to defeat if they could an allegedly corrupt claim in damages ; that the imperative public interest in the case was that the applicants had a proper opportunity of obtaining the evidence they sought so that the grave allegations which they made , and were the same allegations that had troubled the Court of Appeal sufficiently to allow B. 's appeal , could be properly tested in the courts ; and that , accordingly , B. 's undertaking would be varied to allow him to hand over to the applicants those of the authority 's documents which were incorporated in his appeal bundle , the applicants for their part undertaking to use those documents only for the purposes of defending the present libel proceedings pursued against them ( post , pp. 927G — 928A , B ) .
18 All that we are concerned to ensure is that the present applicants have a proper opportunity of obtaining the evidence they seek so that the grave allegations which they make — the very same allegations that troubled this court sufficiently to allow the appellant 's appeal — can be properly tested in the courts .
19 One drawback here is , because of copyright problems , most centres do not allow school staff to take software away and it can not , therefore , be properly evaluated in the context with pupils in class or in the library .
20 The next heart-stopping moment can only be properly described in the jockey 's own words :
21 Fourthly , it was pointed out sensibly in Littlewoods by both Lord Denning MR and Megaw LJ that a clause made " inter rusticos " ( ie without legal help on either side ) can be properly construed in the light of the way in which both parties thought it would be likely to be interpreted .
22 The future of every mine must now be properly considered in the review .
23 It is that such questions can only be properly pursued in the company of the disciplinary studies .
24 Such abbreviated language is standard practice and will be widely adopted in the remainder of this book .
25 My right hon. Friend 's measured response will be widely welcomed in the House and elsewhere .
26 Is my hon. Friend aware that his statement that 28 landfill sites will be used will be widely welcomed in the country as well as , I hope , by responsible organisations such as Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace ?
27 This will be widely discussed in the financial press and by market practitioners .
28 Its latest report lists two agents as likely to be widely used in the near future , Gambusio affinis , a fish that feeds on mosquito larvae , and Bacillus thuringiensis , a bacterium that kills mosquito larvae .
29 The concept began to be widely used in the social sciences early in this century after it was adopted as a central idea by the Italian theorists Gaetano Mosca and Vilfredo Pareto .
30 Reassessing the skills you bring back to nursing or health visiting can be a worthwhile preparation for returning to practice , even if you feel a poor judge of what skills might be most needed in the future .
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