Example sentences of "take [adv prt] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Once a project is on a donor 's priority list it takes on a life of its own , and may become unstoppable .
2 Her novel had remained relevant over two centuries simply because Frankenstein was the archetype of the scientist whose research , pursued in the sacred name of increasing knowledge , takes on a life of its own and causes untold misery before being brought under control .
3 Next you come to the dark ride where history takes on a life of its own and light , movement and sound come together to give you a realistic living picture of the town and its history .
4 This means that the job of the new Treasury Chief Secretary takes on a significance which may unnerve Michael Portillo .
5 If , also — is allowed to be a random variable the analysis , though still tedious , takes on a degree of order that is valuable .
6 Or in autumn when purple moorland takes on a blanket of golden patchwork .
7 Direct Line never takes on a liability of more than a year .
8 Direct Line never takes on a liability of more than a year .
9 And Waxman 's Carmen Fantasy takes on a dimension of passion rarely heard in such an undisguised pot-pourri entertainment .
10 First was a reference in the contract to general principles of law , second a reference to arbitration in the case of differences with respect to the interpretation and performance of the contract , and third that the contract ‘ takes on a dimension of a new category of agreements between States and private persons : economic development agreements . ’
11 Gold in its natural form glows deep amber yellow , but when mixed with the various alloys it takes on a variety of hues .
12 The ‘ thick description ’ takes on a type of metaphoric quality : it stands as a symbolic indication of some wider social meaning within the culture which is elicited through critical interpretation .
13 A property that is not specified takes on a default value .
14 Meanwhile , Lil takes on a sort of coaching role , hissing admonitions from her seven sets of lips .
15 The ten contestants will be in the area for four days , from June 24–27 , as Dungannon takes on a festival atmosphere .
16 ‘ Of Course ’ takes on a fiddle .
17 Even depressed Fort William takes on a magnificence from this height as it glitters and reflects the late evening sun .
18 Vertical loyalties within groups are taken to be the common base for the preservation of conformity as each individual knows their place and takes on a role consistent with that place .
19 The teacher takes on a role as a member of the local council who has been away on business .
20 During the day , take your pick of anything from a pizza to a sizzling steak served at the poolside barbecue grill — and afternoon coffee takes on a flavour all of its own when enjoyed with a fresh pastry cooked before your eyes .
21 Calcite with 5–8% MgCO 3 takes on a pink to pale red colour , and ‘ high-Mg ’ calcite takes on a deep red colour .
22 The difference this time is that it is someone they personally loved and therefore it takes on an importance quite different from any event they may have witnessed before .
23 The show itself dealt undisguisedly with Lucille Ball 's troubled marriage to Cuban band leader Desi Arnez , the birth of their son , the twin tugs of showbiz and domesticity , and so on ; just as Sean 's Show overtly takes on the hero 's difficulties with women , and his tendency towards depression and paranoia .
24 This is the heart of the notion of the inner city ; at the very moment that policy draws the boundaries of the inner city a place takes on the qualities of coherence that it does not possess , embodies all the contradictions that are part of the original concept .
25 Table Tennis Douglas takes on the Preans .
26 It reads as a separate vertical volume and without being an actual pedestal , it takes on the function of a pedestal .
27 NCUBE TAKES ON THE TERAFLOPPERS WITH ORACLE-RUNNING 65,384-PROCESSOR NCUBE 3 FOR 1994
28 Her major musical films included Evergreen ( 1934 ) , an untidy but profitable adaptation of a West End stage success ; First a Girl ( 1935 ) , in which Matthews amusingly impersonates a female impersonator in a British version of the German Viktor und Viktoria , and the fascinating It 's Love Again ( 1936 ) , in which Matthews is a struggling dancer who takes on the character of a fictional celebrity dreamed up by two desperate newspaper men .
29 As soon as Maastricht comes into force , the commission and Belgium , which takes on the EC presidency next month , intend to work however many hours a week it takes to push through the works-council directive .
30 RADIO : Billy Butler takes on the challenges offered by Radio City 's Tony Snell and one man celebrating 25 wavelength years John Peel .
  Next page