Example sentences of "of [noun] [subord] [art] " in BNC.

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1 So he divided the people , half to scour the right bank of the river down the forested links and narrows as far as the meadows above Logierait and force a signature from every proprietor , half to come with him to the north side ; they would all meet at Haugh of Ballechin after the sun had set and plan for tomorrow .
2 Nonconformists were slower to attempt some degree of unity than the Church of England , which began the Lambeth Conferences in 1867 .
3 Even with such adjustments the proportion may vary between the two approaches if local authority expenditure contains a different proportion of taxes than the GNP as a whole .
4 The current year basis of assessment is not an actual basis of assessment unless a 31 March year end is selected , and therefore tax retentions will remain complex to calculate .
5 UP : a knows the meaning of p iff a knows how to verify p .
6 UP 1 a knows the meaning of p iff a knows what difference the truth of p would make to the evidence of a 's senses .
7 ( Note that the rate of progress if the average students should be the guiding line in these suggestion . )
8 Electrical engineers will be reminded of the torque versus speed curve of an induction motor which exhibits an unstable and unmeasurable set of values as the curve turns back on itself at the pull-out torque .
9 In fact the dream that we all had about Great Britain acknowledging it 's theatre and funding it properly has suffered a lot of setbacks since the ‘ sixties ’ .
10 He was within three yards of Laidlaw when the Lieutenant shot him .
11 Cavalry can not break into a solid phalanx of pikes until a way has been cut for them , but once in they can do fearful slaughter .
12 The performance of the gangling Ferguson was a particularly impressive application for a place against Portugal in the World Cup qualifying tie , especially since he was largely bereft of support while the Germans occupied Scotland 's attention elsewhere on the park .
13 These pass on tips about jobs or lodgings , or can give a firm base of support once a migrant has crossed the border .
14 In many cases this care can continue with adjustments in the amount of support until the elderly person dies .
15 These technical , professional discussions had already shaped the direction of change before the Act was drafted , in and out of war .
16 The pace of change since the Second World War has been so swift that we have to be careful not to make assumptions about the past based on what we see around us every day .
17 But while they gave support and commitment , it was lesbians who were at the forefront of change when the Girls ' Work Movement came to life in the late seventies and early eighties .
18 How many have tried to blow Harold Macmillan 's winds of change when the context did not merit the phrase ?
19 It was hesitant about its role , and indeed divided within itself over doctrinal issues like the significance of the Resurrection , and over such indicators of change as the ordination of women .
20 The time I was supposed to be going through this a lot of schools were getting a bit of stick because a lot of parents did n't like it .
21 A night of champagne where every man in the room looked like James Dean and Cherry was in his favourite spot : the centre of attention .
22 But it was enormously popular when it first came out in 1764 , and it started a whole train of similar books which even came to include such works of genius as the Brontë sisters ' Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights .
23 Yesterday Dr Morris said : ‘ The latest work will be a follow-up to an earlier study that showed how the community 's health was 30pc worse in some parts of Sunderland than the country as a whole , and 30pc worse again in parts of Middlesbrough .
24 But there was only good-natured laughter and the jingling of coins as the men tried to outdo each other in their generosity .
25 It is an excellent example of the pointlessness of so much intelligence work , often conceived in the looking-glass world of make-believe where no one seems to be in touch with the real world outside , or to even consider the consequences of their ludicrous ideas .
26 On force platforms , a walker 's energy level appears virtually constant : he swings between kinetic and gravitational energy , using one leg to rise over his centre of mass while the other speeds downward to exchange gravitational energy for speed and more kinetic energy .
27 The Uthwatt Committee noted that there were only three cases in which betterment had actually been paid under the Planning Acts , and all these were before the 1932 Act introduced a provision for the deferment of payment until the increased value had actually been realised either by sale or lease or by change of use .
28 The same applies in flying instrument approaches : although it is a stable instrument platform , care is required since the flap limiting speed is around 100 knots , and even with the power back to around 15 ’ of manifold if the aircraft is allowed to descend before flaps and undercarriage are deployed it is very difficult to bring the speed back .
29 However , this is n't likely to occur within the National Parks and although , as Table 8.2 shows , they have a higher percentage of woodland than the rest of the uplands , voluntary agreements to limit any further afforestation will reduce their relative share .
30 The youngest BCRS member , 3-year-old Daisy Nottingham 's look of horror as the train entered the first tunnel .
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