Example sentences of "in [art] [adj] [subord] " in BNC.

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1 In other words , in our model we accept the view that the inflation-unemployment trade-off is less favourable in the long-run than in the short-run , but we do not adopt the more extreme view that the trade-off disappears completely in the long-run .
2 We have seen that monetarists hold the view that inflation is caused by excessive money supply growth and that attempts to reduce unemployment below the NUP will be futile in the long-run because the long-run Phillips curve is vertical .
3 Some lost far more manufacturing jobs in the 1970s than others .
4 Asa Briggs , the historian of British broadcasting , has noted how changes in society — and trends such as professionalization and unionization in the BBC — have made ‘ governing the BBC ’ more difficult in the 1970s than at any other period .
5 A log rank test analysis showed survival was significantly better in the 1970s than the 1980s ( χ 2 2 1 =8 , p<0.05 ) .
6 In spite of innovative work with colour coding ( now entirely dismantled ) by Carey at Hatfield Polytechnic Library in the 1970s where he emphasized that an effective library guiding system was an important prerequisite to any library instruction programme , the subject received little serious attention by libraries until the end of the decade .
7 The difficulty of resolving this issue contributed to the failure of proposals in the 1970s for a Scottish assembly when Labour was last in power .
8 The failure of the Royal Commission 's own research to support their advocacy of large-scale units of local government led to scepticism in the 1970s as opinion swung away from a belief in bigness as a correlate of efficiency and progress .
9 Further innovation began in the 1970s as banks came to regard their foreign branches as profit centres in their own right , not just as overseas service counters for domestic clients with overseas interests .
10 Though the production function approach was subjected to a great deal of criticism from the start , this criticism increased very substantially in the 1970s as the economies of the world began to stagnate .
11 vol 96. p 41 8 ) has now turned up in the normal as well as the tumour tissues of a bladder cancer patient .
12 Statistics were enclosed showing that the average student fee per class meeting ( 12.45d. ) was higher and the teaching costs at least 50% greater in the Eastern than in any other District .
13 Nevertheless , it can be claimed that such exploration will be discussing a theistic structure found in the Eastern as well as the Western traditions .
14 Mithra 's other form , found in the Eastern as well as the Western world , is as a lion-headed monster around whose body a serpent is coiled .
15 Most of such strictly industrial production was to be found in the middling-sized though rapidly growing cities or even — notably in mining and some kinds of textiles — in villages and small towns .
16 McCarrick put them ahead in the eighth minute and they should have settled it in the 67th when Muir had a penalty saved , but Rimmer made no mistake from the spot to level the scores in the 83rd minute .
17 The comparison of the scores of positivity for each RIBA 2 peptide showed significantly higher values in the cryptogenic than the autoimmune group only for c33c and c22–3 ( p<0.05 and p<0.001 , respectively ) .
18 They include a group of works bought in the 1790s for Stanislas Augustus , the last King of Poland by the London-based French picture dealer Noel Desenfans .
19 Ozone depletion over the Arctic was believed to appear less severe than in the Antarctic because air currents in the northern hemisphere brought fresh supplies of ozone-rich air into the region , restoring ozone levels .
20 It estimated the minke population in the Antarctic as around 750,000 , and suggested that up to 100,000 could be taken from the area over the next decade .
21 But the power to do so , which was usually — and contemptuously — referred to as magic , had been waning in the Fifth since Chant had first arrived .
22 At the start only 14 per cent of our panel reported Labour stressing these issues , but the figure rose to 20 per cent in the fourth week and 32 per cent in the fifth as Labour sought to divert attention away from defence and to move on from unemployment , which directly affected only a small minority , to education and especially the National Health Service , which directly affected the vast majority of the electorate .
23 The purer strains of Liberal individualism were markedly less influential in the 1900s than in the previous generation .
24 It must be borne in mind that this distribution , while , likely to be typical of the 1910 sample as a whole , does reflect that sample sage structure : the information comes from marriages logged very largely between 1910 and 1920 and obviously tells us more about the families that sent their daughter to the trade in the 1900s than about the earlier decades .
25 Their father was the inimitable Sandy Greig , then a colleague on my newspaper group and a wonderful companion in the Press-box whether at cricket or rugby .
26 Charles 's Navy had fought very well against the Dutch in the 1660s until the money ran out , and had kept going in the 1670s satisfactorily enough .
27 The estimated 70,000 Rwandan refugees in Uganda , many of whom as members of the Tutsi ethnic minority had left Rwanda in the 1960s after extensive communal violence [ see pp. 20085-86 ] , were the subject of bilateral talks in November 1989 .
28 Even without Terence O'Neill , such claims would have had a better hearing in the 1960s than they had had in the 1920s .
29 The big financial sections in the dailies owed more to the growth of appropriate advertising in the 1960s than to a surge of reader interest .
30 In spite of this improvement in the level of the benefit , the percentages of ‘ eligible ’ strikers were lower in the 1960s than the 1950s .
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