Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Hence the state can act in the long-run interests of capital against the current wishes of short-sighted capitalists .
2 Civil servants in an advanced industrial state are meritocratically selected ( Therborn , 1978 ) even though their tasks are to plan in the long-run interests of capitalism .
3 American federalism was also explained by Charles Beard ( 1935 ) as a device which promoted national integration in the long-run interests of the merchant class .
4 Moreover , the results have reinforced the belief that the general equilibrium effects are potentially important and can be safely ignored only in special circumstances ( this , we shall see , is even more true in the long-run models explored in the next Lecture ) .
5 The combined effect of these problems is currently felt in the Spanish railways ' extremely low commercial speeds which greatly hamper competition with road and air transport .
6 The Thyssen museum opened in Madrid on 9th of last month to fairly general self-congratulation in the Spanish newspapers , qualified by the hope that the paintings would remain there at the end of the nine and a half years loan/rental period ( The Art Newspaper No. 21 , Oct 1992 , pp.1 , 6 ) .
7 He remained in York 's employment until the Restoration , first in the French and then in the Spanish armies , and became his groom of the Stole and one of his closest friends .
8 On a walking holiday in the Spanish mountains , Jeremy had been staying at the Elola climbers ' refuge and had left there two weeks before to spend a day taking photographs .
9 Toby Haggith relates the tragic story of the death of Jeremy Parkinson in the Spanish Gredos mountains , and the disturbing questions it raises about the competence of the authorities involved in launching a search when Jeremy went missing
10 Within a couple of days they had paired off with English boys whom they met in the Spanish bars .
11 ‘ It wo n't be necessary , Agnes dear , ’ said Dorothy , in the firm tones of a headmistress .
12 This decrease in the CO2 yield corresponds to the increase in hydrocarbon yield ( the total cumulative yield : is the same for both coals ) and since chemical analyses of the Palaeozoic and Tertiary coals at the same maturity were very similar , it can be inferred that there are internal differences in the chemical structures of the two coal types .
13 This led to Gibson being seconded in 1928 to work with Michels on the properties of gases at high pressures , and to ICI becoming interested in the chemical effects of high pressures , the theme of Gibson 's work on his return to Winnington in 1931 .
14 The organisation has also linked into UNESCO 's regional networks in the chemical sciences .
15 The volumetric analysis covered in the chemical methods section is unnecessarily long because it mainly consists of acid-base and indicator theory that can be found in standard A-level textbooks .
16 We can see part of the answer by looking at how modern DNA molecules cooperate in the chemical factories that are living cells .
17 For Canguilhem the history of a concept will have its own specific temporality , demonstrating less a process of epistemological self-correction as in the pure sciences than the persistence of the problem within all the contradictory solutions and ideological values that have been given to it and which make up its history .
18 Markofdistinction ( 3.50 ) , who got even closer to Nashwan when fourth in the 2,000 Guineas , was beaten at Doncaster by what is probably an outstanding horse in Nashwan 's stable companion Gold Seam and should find compensation in the Supreme Stakes .
19 Lord Haldane himself expressed his ‘ strong conviction that , at all events for a judge who is to sit in the Supreme Tribunals of the Empire , a House of Commons training is a real advantage .
20 The Sunday-school Treat was a day at the seaside , and the children were taken in the horse-drawn wagons .
21 The theme of movement is again explored in the twisting pieces of aluminium , that have been translated into bronze in the final sculpture .
22 ‘ Like many secondary schools , we 're seeing an enormous change in the upper school population — both in the sheer numbers of those staying on , and in the type of students we have .
23 Giggling like a child , rueful self-mockery etched on every line of her face , she applauded when a shout went up , joined in the disappointed groans when it proved a false alarm , commiserated with a rather determined little girl who had wandered into her own area of search and who thought she should have found one by now , and , thoroughly amused , by herself as much as by others , she whole-heartedly entered into the spirit of the thing .
24 He saw a flicker in the ice-blue eyes behind the pince-nez .
25 The valley of the upper Lugg is a tree-clad grove in the rounded mountains of that part of Wales still known to its inhabitants as Radnorshire .
26 On one occasion , he noted that curtains had been put between three of the beds in the aged women 's ward , and thought this undesirable for several reasons — having reference to cleanliness and ventilation .
27 Mary of Guise was brought up in the charmed circles of the greatest French aristocracy .
28 As far as the eye could see the earth was brown : there were white pockets of unmelted snow , and sombre green pine thickets on the ridges , but no leaves on the deciduous trees and no bright green shoots in the withered remains of last year 's grass .
29 If the by-election results were repeated throughout the district , the number of Labour councillors on Wear Valley Council would be reduced from eight to four with the Liberals increasing from 28 to 32 scarcely a reason for rejoicing in the Labour ranks .
30 They still see Scotland as north Britain , an appendage that can be guaranteed to play its part in the Labour unionists ' drama of periodically legitimising long periods of Tory rule by brief interregnums of Labour control .
  Next page