Example sentences of "to the twentieth " in BNC.

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1 After the crisis in the Communist Party following Khrushchev 's speech to the Twentieth Party Congress , CPGB was in turmoil .
2 A survey of niello composition , from the Roman period to the twentieth century , has identified the beginnings of a change in composition in the sixth century in Northern Europe when , perhaps for economic reasons , copper as well as silver was added to the crucible with the sulphur .
3 In the transition from the nineteenth century to the twentieth century , clitoridectomy , it appears , ceased to be acceptable .
4 By adopting the Scottish term , Free Church , instead of Nonconformist , the movement was showing that it was making a new start with an eye to the twentieth , not to the nineteenth or even eighteenth century .
5 The pernicious notion that we can believe whatever we feel like believing may not be unique to the twentieth century but it has certainly found great popularity in it .
6 Even if that analysis is too simple , the threads that lead from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries can still be followed .
7 All the music played was written by composers who were chemists ( or almost so ) , ranging from the seventeenth to the twentieth century , from Campion to Elgar .
8 These are obvious cases because the forms are linguistically or stylistically related , and in one of them it will be shown later that the name became hereditary — as Forsey — down to the twentieth century .
9 There are several other possible explanations but they are all of an uncertain nature , so the study will not be pursued in these pages , Instead , a name from the author 's conjugate family will be used , because its origin and development can be traced , quite unambiguously , from the thirteenth century to the twentieth .
10 The newspapers invented the misleading name ‘ total allergy syndrome ’ for her problem , as well as the melodramatic headline ‘ Allergic to the Twentieth Century ’ .
11 It has been rebuilt and readorned many times , and most centuries from the fourth to the twentieth — when it had to be largely rebuilt after the Second World War — have contributed to it ; it is a supreme symbol of continuity .
12 But the point to notice is that a key part of humanist thought , from the early Greeks down to the twentieth century , is the attempt to justify man 's knowledge by his reason alone , denying the necessity of faith in general and God 's revelation in particular .
13 ‘ Take me up to the twentieth floor , quickly , ’ she said .
14 The exhibition ‘ Western painting from the sixteenth to the twentieth century from the Bremen Kunsthalle Collection ’ , the show of some of the works of art looted at the end of World War II , has moved from the Hermitage in St Petersburg to the All-Russian Museum of Decorative , Applied and Folk Art in Moscow .
15 In light of the success of the Spanish sale held in London last spring and in recognition of the importance of German art in the international marketplace , Christie 's are organising a sale devoted entirely to German art from the sixteenth to the twentieth century , which will be held at King Street in May of 1993 .
16 In Joanna Russ 's The Female Man , Janet , returning to the twentieth century from an all-female future , visits the Pentagon , and asks , ’ where the dickens are all the women ? ’ ( 1985 : 8 ) .
17 More than 120 paintings dating from the fifteenth to the twentieth century have been loaned from The State Museum of Ukrainian Art , Kiev , the majority nineteenth-century portraits and genre scenes but also some fine icons such as ‘ The Miracle of Saint George ’ , second half of the fifteenth century , from the Church of the Elevation of the Holy Cross , Zvyzhen ( Galicia ) , and a group of avant-garde works from the private collection of the Kiev collector Ihor Dyehenko .
18 Instead they have imaginatively reconstructed the imaginary town 's historical development over eight centuries : from the time that the first stone buildings would have been erected , through the period of canal-building and land-reclamation in the seventeenth century , to the twentieth century with its emphasis on the development of ‘ a comfortable urbanity ’ , exemplified by turn-of-the-century villas .
19 The fourteen papers include : ‘ The Renaissance draughtsman and his models ’ by Francis Ames-Lewis , which takes issue with some of the opinions in the Woodner exhibition catalogue ; ‘ The creative copy in nineteenth-century French art ’ by Richard Thompson , which produces some striking juxtapositions such as a Redon charcoal after Leonardo 's Louvre ‘ Virgin and Child with Saint Anne ’ with the original painting ; ‘ Claude Lorraine as a figure draughtsman ’ by Michael Kitson ; ‘ The charcoal drawings of Odilon Redon ’ by Vojtech Jirat-Wasiutynski ; ‘ Pastel : its evolution to the twentieth century ’ by Genevieve Monnier ’ ; and ‘ An unknown collection of drawings in the eighteenth century ’ by Tilman Falk , which attempts to reconstruct the collection of the Rheinland merchant Johann Jakob Faesch ( 1732–96 ) .
20 Second , for the non-professional art lover , we shall be keeping the ‘ period rooms ’ , originally gifts from generous donors , while attempting to order them in a coherent sequence spanning the period from the fifteenth to the twentieth century .
21 Entries are invited for the Minda de Gunzberg prize for an outstanding exhibition catalogue on Western art from the middle ages to the twentieth century , in any language , published in 1992 .
22 Peter Laslett , for instance , has attempted to show that the average household size from the late sixteenth century to the twentieth century was 4.75 persons ( that is , always ‘ nuclear ’ ) , and he has used this data to challenge the notion that the nuclear model is a product of ‘ modernisation ’ .
23 What was taking place was much more complex , and the working-class patterns of family and sexual life that were brought to the twentieth century were as much the product of working-class adaptation to rapid change in the context of a ruling set of ideas as a successful colonisation .
24 As the nineteenth century gave way to the twentieth , two related changes began to alter the relationship between the upper classes and the ownership of the means of production .
25 That is , I think , a somewhat tendentious description of the classic realist novel , and , in fact , writers like E. M. Forster , D. H. Lawrence , Ernest Hemingway , Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene have written fiction that answers to the twentieth century 's sense of moral and philosophical crisis without deviating violently from the conventions of classic realism .
26 Challenging problems faced physicists , then , as the nineteenth century gave way to the twentieth , problems calling for new speculative hypotheses designed to overcome these problems in a progressive way .
27 A lot of what has been said about make up has been very negative its to disguise or improve , its also an expression of er inner identity and its not something that 's new to the twentieth century , its something that we 've been doing you know since the beginning of time with war paint and what not .
28 Perhaps more significantly many felt that by celebrating the Iran of Cyrus and Dariuss , the Shah completely and deliberately ignored a per of Iran 's history that was far more relevant to the twentieth century AD — the teachings of the prophet Muhammad .
29 His outstanding contribution was to the Dictionary of National Biography , for which he wrote 778 biographies covering the period from the eleventh to the twentieth centuries .
30 In his report to the Twentieth Congress of the CPSU in 1956 Khrushchev branded these two pacts as ‘ not only aggressive military and political alignments but also instruments of enslavement ; a new colonial type form of exploitation of the underdeveloped countries ’ .
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