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

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1 But just because Club 18–30 is a great place for meeting people and making new friends of either sex , it does n't mean to say that those people who already have someone special in their lives ca n't come and join in the fun as well .
2 The prostitutes , all aged between eighteen and twenty-three , apparently became La Tour 's perks and he was generally expected to join in the fun as well .
3 The changes in the languages as seen on television reflect its higher status and the loss of regional dialects .
4 There is shooting almost daily in the capital as roaming snipers attack military checkpoints ; small-arms fire only , say the authorities .
5 Her London home was used as a hostel by the Scottish rank and file who needed a bed in the capital as they were posted from one place to another , and all were made welcome .
6 Although he anticipated a change in the relationship as Britain gradually concentrated on its roles in Europe , for the present the two countries continued to take " a broadly similar view of the world " .
7 We can then predict changes in the behaviour as consequences of changes in either the antecedents or consequences according to the laws of operant learning .
8 Analysis of a small Roman plaque with a black patina and gold inlays proved it to be largely copper with traces of silver , gold and arsenic , adding weight to the view that this patination technique was practised in the West as well as the East .
9 The spirituality of The Cloud of Unknowing never became as popular in the West as the Mystical Theology of Dionysius has remained in eastern Orthodox Christianity , but perhaps in our own day when many people in the Western world have reacted against inadequate human ideas of God , this book might prove to be a refreshing and useful corrective .
10 On the face of it there are more contrasts than resemblances between , for example , the brand of empirical and then linguistic philosophy which has predominated in England in recent decades , the existentialist thought which has led the way in western Europe , and the critical reflection on human history and society on a broadly Marxist basis which has naturally held sway in communist countries , but more recently come more to the fore in the west as well .
11 It was a foolhardy decision : these formations arrived too late in the east to affect events there , but their transfer so weakened the German thrust in the west as to make material success in that theatre improbable .
12 And Iran is as unpopular in the West as it has ever been .
13 It is possibly true , and though the challenges presented to the Western bishops on the nature of the Church ( Donatism ) and about grace and free will ( Pelagianism ) were serious enough , theological debate rarely seems to have aroused the same passions in the West as it did in the East .
14 Security of employment is not as uncommon in the West as the stereotypical contrast with Japan implies , but what is more noticeable is the extension of security to blue-collar labour in Japan as well as white-collar employees .
15 Although the conflict was perceived in the West as being an invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union , the prime treaty commitment is in the Agreement between Afghanistan and Pakistan on the Principle of Mutual Relations in Particular of Non-Interference and Non-Intervention .
16 Debt earns interest just as easily in the West as it does in the Third World .
17 Baker , who described his role in the talks as attempting to impress upon the Iraqi government the determination of the 28-country coalition to eject Iraqi forces from Kuwait , said that he had " heard nothing which showed any Iraqi flexibility whatever " .
18 Alternatively the decrease might be due to a progressive increase in vortex pinning in the superfluid as the neutron star slows down and cools .
19 Her father , it should be noted , observed only one of his daughter 's friends , who appears in the poetry as ‘ Fidelia ’ [ see ML , 2 , p. xxx ] .
20 Keynesian ideas were predominant in the Treasury as well as among academic economists .
21 One woman fainted in the crush as police fought to control a crowd of up to a thousand .
22 His popular wife , who was a National Farmers ' Union branch secretary before the birth of their children , is seen in the constituency as calm and strong , but also gentle and kind .
23 He describes the injuries of 20 people in the explosion as ‘ regrettable ’ and argues that only an ‘ inclusive peace process ’ will end the conflict .
24 However , sixty-two-year-old Eastwood , directing his 16th picture , is still sitting as tall in the saddle as The Man With No Name did nearly 30 years ago .
25 He could not find any and he realised that it would be the voice of Dame Melba which rang out in the backstreets as he advertised the fact that he had a gramophone for sale .
26 Her shots tore off one man 's ear and wounded another man in the buttocks as he fled from the pub .
27 Language itself , word following Word , is giving birth to new forms — ‘ piaculative ’ is listed in the OED as ‘ rare ’ , this poem being its only cited occurrence .
28 In the Indian as in the Near Eastern traditions , the theistic structure is one which suggests the existence of a single supreme being , under whom many other divine forces may operate , but always at a lesser level to the one ‘ God ’ under whose control they ultimately stand .
29 Certainly that was as close to a gap in the smokescreen as there had been , when Charlie 's Indians were screaming ( silently ) for a quick sale to sever their connection but before a barricade of shell companies could be erected to take it over …
30 The sun was dark red behind the trees now and their voices echoed in the valley as they slid on the frozen horse pond in the yard .
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