Example sentences of "interfere with [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Such learning would then interfere with a subsequent attempt to teach the subject a taste-poison association .
2 None of the superhuman beings — with the exception of the two already mentioned — can thus interfere with a human being unless a rule has been broken .
3 There was some public outcry about the shooting , and the police would probably interfere with a lot of his business interests while looking for Connie Fraser .
4 It is merely a rough guide to the general sentencing levels that this court feels is appropriate , and allowance needs to be made for inconsistency on the part of the Court of Appeal itself ( Thomas , 1993 ) , plus the considerable ‘ latitude ’ which is normally allowed before it will interfere with a sentence passed by the Crown Court .
5 There are cases in which prosecutions failed because the nuisance did not interfere with a sufficient number of the public .
6 The stent covered the entire stricture in each case and , as only the distal intrapancreatic portion of the CBD was stented with this unremovable material , it should not interfere with a possible future hepaticojejunostomy or choledocoduodenostomy .
7 Courts will only interfere with a spending decision of a public authority in the most unusual circumstances .
8 Although their rooting system did n't interfere with the other crops , the 18in-tall vines cast too heavy a shadow on the plants below .
9 It wo n't interfere with the ‘ cause ’ in the least , not in the least . ’ ’
10 In part this reflects a reluctance to let outsiders interfere with the job of policing , as well as a suspicion about soci — ology , which for many policemen sounds too much like the word ‘ socialist ’ ; social work suffers from the same association .
11 The idea , one that 's been adopted many times since , was to ‘ camouflage ’ the door handle so it did n't interfere with the body lines .
12 The jammers , at a cost of $3.5 million per plane , are designed to identify radars , single out the most dangerous ones and then transmit electronic signals to deceive or interfere with the radars of the hostile air defence weapons .
13 The Vatican spokesman , Mr Joacquin Novarro-Vallas , in Rome yesterday denounced the US siege tactics , and said ‘ an occupying power can not interfere with the work of a diplomatic mission or demand that a person who is seeking asylum there be handed over to it ’ .
14 Nests tunnelled under plants can seriously interfere with the root system , causing plants to wilt and die , while nests on lawns create little heaps of soil , making mowing difficult .
15 Lord Justice Lloyd and Mr Justice Waterhouse said they could not interfere with the exercise of discretion by Judge Owen in Manchester Crown Court last November .
16 Ensure that no masonry falls down into the cavity , where it could interfere with the wall ties .
17 It is wrong that new regulations , designed to deal with isolated problems , should interfere with the private arrangements of citizens or with reasonable commercial practices that have earned broad public acceptance .
18 The original position seems to presuppose not just a neutral theory of the good , but a liberal , individualistic conception according to which the best that can be wished for someone is the unimpeded pursuit of his own path , provided it does not interfere with the rights of others .
19 First , the winning of civil rights during and after the eighteenth century : in a number of important cases the courts developed the doctrine that the individual was free to do anything which was not made unlawful by a specific law ; and the corollary of this approach was that the state could not interfere with the civil and political liberties of its citizens ( in those days ‘ subjects ’ ) unless the government could persuade Parliament to pass legislation authorising the interference .
20 The term proactive interference is used to refer to the fact that prior learning can interfere with the acquisition , retention , or use of new information .
21 But the exact nature of the associate does not matter — the mere existence of a CS-X association will interfere with the ability of the pre-exposed flavour to form a new association as is required in both excitatory and inhibitory conditioning .
22 The analysis offered by interference theory is similar , but rather simpler — it is that the existence of these ( within stimulus ) associations will interfere with the ability of the elements to form new ones .
23 The first , and perhaps the simplest , was that the formation of within-stimulus associations might interfere with the acquisition of subsequent associations involving these stimulus elements ( and , I must now add , might interfere with the ability of subsequently formed associations to influence behaviour ) .
24 The first , and perhaps the simplest , was that the formation of within-stimulus associations might interfere with the acquisition of subsequent associations involving these stimulus elements ( and , I must now add , might interfere with the ability of subsequently formed associations to influence behaviour ) .
25 It does n't seem like it if you consider some of the most recent press reports : endless bickering about which London group will bid for the Olympics in the year 2000 ; the decision for the 1992 Games not to allow the slower marathoners to finish in the stadium because they will interfere with the closing ceremony ; Charlie Francis 's cynical opinion that most of the world 's top athletes are on drugs .
26 Catch crops , which are grown as a bonus between the main courses of a rotation , can be very worth while provided they do not interfere with the cultivation and growing of main crops , cause undue proliferation of weeds , or form a ‘ disease link ’ between susceptible main crops .
27 At the critical seasons a ritual response was required to overcome the unpredictable factors that might otherwise interfere with the regular growth of crops .
28 Rubber wetsuits they regarded with distaste as contraceptive sheaths that would interfere with the primal experience .
29 This finding may be important , since it is known that chemical modification of lysine amino groups of the apoprotein may interfere with the specific LDL receptor binding and hence clearance of LDL ( Gonen et al , 1981 ; Kim & Kurup , 1982 ; Witzum et al , 1982 ) .
30 ‘ The kind of smell which makes sick people worse must interfere with the vigour and vitality of those who are well , but at all events it is sufficient to show that sick persons are injured thereby ’ , per Stephen , J. in the Malton Manure case .
  Next page