Example sentences of "of [art] men [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 On Oct. 6 the court sentenced 11 of the men including the MTP leader , Roberto Felicetti , and two of the women to life imprisonment for murder , wounding , robbery and rebellion , with the possibility of release after 25 years for good behaviour ; the remaining seven , including the priest , Fr Juan Antonio Puigjane , an MTP leader who had not participated in the actual attack , were sentenced to terms of between 10 and 20 years ' imprisonment for complicity .
2 Though he did have a bit of a tan , unlike most of the men over here .
3 ‘ It is wrong , ’ said one of the men beside him , ‘ wrong to trouble the dead . ’
4 He had condemned one of the men to death — which one was for the future .
5 only in rare circumstances is the social position of women not determined by that of the men to whom they are attached by marriage or family of origin .
6 In part his object , especially in New York , was to recruit seamen from British ships into the union , a device which Joe Cotter , for one , regarded with admiration since as a result membership of the NSFU " went up by leaps and bounds " But he was also testing out the reaction of the men to the notion of an international strike , a theme he pursued at dozens of meetings in the United Kingdom in the following year , thirty such meetings being held in London alone .
7 I remembered the threatening looks of the men of the family , the attentive stares from the ones in the street , my mother 's harsh way of talking : and I repeated it to myself .
8 This is the task of the men of the Royal Army Medical Corps .
9 Surrounding this court was the court of the men of Israel , reserved for non-priestly Jewish males .
10 Moreover , the isolation of the men of the wetlands led to inbreeding .
11 On the evening you then had perhaps 100 or more guests altogether sitting down to a splendid meal followed afterwards by an entertainment organised by some of the men of the congregation .
12 The last quarter of the nineteenth century was a tremendous time in British deaf history , not just because of the events that took place and the deeds that were done , but also because of the men of remarkable ability and calibre who were to be giants amongst deaf , and hearing , people .
13 He had seen some of the men of Famagusta .
14 Secrecy sets the imagination free to create unrestrained and guiltless fantasies of consequence in the world , and it was one of the achievements of the men of Northern Nigeria to create a practical milieu in which such fantasies might be enjoyed .
15 ‘ I am afraid you will have to take account of the men of the Manhattan Project , ’ said Erlich through chattering teeth .
16 We do not have to go far to see the houses of the men of 1880 ; many of us are still living in them .
17 ‘ What can be smashed , must be smashed , ’ wrote Pisarev , the most brilliant spokesman of the men of the 1860s .
18 The historian is entitled to regard the matter of leadership as an ‘ issue ’ in the minds of the men of this time .
19 Of the great fear of the men of property our sources leave us in no doubt .
20 The electorate did not need to be a democratic one , and as a general rule was not ; all that was needed was an electorate consisting of the men of substance , so that the government would be responsive to their choices .
21 Now he was criticising the discipline of the men of Tulagai 's personal guard : a force of about a hundred men which was maintained by every one of the Kha-Khan 's grandsons .
22 Both Offa 's dislike of the men of Kent and the extent of the territory now coming under his control may have been factors in the situation in the late 780s , but in 798 Coenwulf and Leo were deploying these arguments selectively and in a way which compromises their validity as single explanations of what was probably a complex situation .
23 ‘ Engines driven by steam will propel a ship such as I have described , and they are within the ability of the men of this world to build . ’
24 Although an ordained cleric , Hervey is said by a contemporary chronicler ( William of Rishanger ) to have been one of two standard-bearers of the men of London at the battle of Lewes in 1264 .
25 It is characteristic of him that he transmitted to us a document which gave the number of the soldiers in the Roman army about 225 B.C. and added the number of the men of military age but not under arms : the document distinguished between Roman citizens and allies , and gave specific figures for the main groups of allies ( 2.23–4 ) .
26 He looked wealthy , assured , and he was beautifully dressed with the casual elegance of the men of his nationality .
27 Dunegal of Nithsdale had not come to Thorfinn 's standard , nor had any of the men of Dumfries and the western lands of St Cuthbert .
28 This would suggest that around 30 per cent of the " living-out " labouring classes were to some extent skilled , but if living-in servants of all classes are included the proportion would shrink to a quarter and if unskilled " manufacturers " are removed , we can conclude that at least a fifth of the men of the labouring classes of the eighteenth century were more or less skilled , that is had something other than " common " labour power to offer on the labour market .
29 This claim illuminates one of the recurrent features of the military history of the period ; the frequent presence of the men of one civitas or another on campaign , above all during the civil wars which bedevilled the second half of the sixth century , when rivalry between cities seems to have exacerbated problems .
30 His burden was lightened by the courage of the men of Tekoa .
  Next page