Example sentences of "to [art] child [noun] " in BNC.

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1 These financial and moral concerns have given rise to a change in policy , which has led to the Child Support Act due to be implemented fully by April 1993 .
2 She advanced this theory to the child psychoanalyst to whom she was delivered the next day .
3 But at the Apprentice House , home to the child workers , the garden has been re-created to illustrate an ideal picture of productivity and industry .
4 Stefan was nearly 4 years old when his desperate mother referred herself to the child guidance centre .
5 Altogether she followed up 345 white American children who had been referred to the child guidance clinic for anti-social behaviour , 130 other referrals and 100 individuals who had attended neighbouring elementary schools who had not been referred for any specialist help , and who therefore provided a comparison group .
6 Thus according to the Child Poverty Action Group ( CPAG ) ‘ poverty is viewed in relation to a generally accepted standard of living in a particular society that goes beyond basic physical needs ’ to include ‘ broader social and cultural needs ’ as well .
7 They are having a real struggle to pay their heating bills , according to the Child Poverty Action Group .
8 Furthermore , as Tony Prosser has recently pointed out with reference to the Child Poverty Action Group 's ( CFAG 's ) social welfare test cases , there is always the danger that ‘ successful test cases which threaten established policy , especially by increasing expenditure , will meet with quick nullification by legislative or administrative action ’ ( Prosser , 1983 , p. 74 ) .
9 Aunt Lou had never looked young , at least not to the child Meredith .
10 So massive a change of emphasis must be of fundamental significance , not only to the anthropologist and the social historian , but to the child psychologists , psychiatrists and psychotherapists whose very existence as a group depends upon the climate of opinion which regards their professional skills as valuable and necessary , and which places them on an equal footing in social esteem with the more anciently respected callings of the paediatrician and the pedagogue .
11 In many respects this was a necessary response to the child population ‘ bulge ’ created by the ‘ baby boom ’ of the immediate postwar years .
12 After the decree absolute had been granted , the mother , contrary to article 3 of the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction set out in Schedule 1 to the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 , removed the children to England without the father 's knowledge .
13 The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal on the ground that the father had acquiesced in the removal or retention of the children by the mother within the meaning of article 13 of the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction contained in Schedule 1 to the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 .
14 This appeal turns on a short point of principle arising under the Convention , the terms of which are set out in Schedule 1 to the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 .
15 In proceedings brought by the husband the judge refused to order the return of the child to Canada , on the grounds that his removal and retention was not wrongful within the meaning of article 3 of the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction , set out in Schedule 1 to the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 , since the father had no rights of custody ; and that , under article 13 , there was a risk that the child would be placed in an intolerable situation if he was returned to Ontario because of the lack of proper accommodation and financial support .
16 The judge had before him an application by a father made under the provisions of the Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction which comprise Schedule 1 to the Child Abduction and Custody Act 1985 .
17 Prior to the Children Act 1989 there might be a care order ( 400 were made in 1987 ) , transferring parental responsibilities to the local authority indefinitely , or a supervision order for a specified period ( of up to three years ) , with a social worker attached to supervise the child 's resumption of full-time schooling .
18 But this book contains much more than an exposition on the background to the Children Act and an explanation of the principles on which it is founded .
19 SSDs are failing to live up to the Children Act requirements to provide an ethnically sensitive service for black children in their care .
20 Prior to the Children Act 1989 coming into operation on 14 October 1991 , the practice was for justices to announce their decision in the most simple terms , saying that they made a care order or a custody order , as the case might be .
21 Home Office Circular 48/1991 contains guidance for magistrates on procedural and other matters relating to the Children Act .
22 On 18 May 1989 , in Standing Committee B , I moved an amendment to the Children Bill , supported by my hon. Friend the Member for Monklands , West ( Mr. Clarke ) , which would have required all local authorities to appoint a children 's rights officer .
23 She was n't Our Lady , Madeleine had explained to the children years ago : she was La France , also La République .
24 If you 're reluctant to ask the school for support , contact your local child or family guidance centre or ask your GP to refer you to a child psychologist .
25 This study aimed to review the content of referral letters from general practitioners to a child psychiatry department and to discover whether general practitioners and psychiatrists hold different views on the information that should be included in a referral letter .
26 Retrospective evidence from 1840 suggests that up to 1796 when it came into use , a master weaver could earn around 12s 6d ( 62½p ) a week , but from this he had , essentially on the old two-man loom , to pay a journeyman 3s 6d ( 17½p ) and his board , and a further 2s ( 10p ) to a child assistant .
27 And only half have that most ubiquitous machine , the washing machine , according to a Child Poverty Group survey carried out with the Family Services Unit in 1981 .
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