Example sentences of "in [art] [noun pl] they " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Different languages use different devices for signalling information structure and translators must develop a sensitivity to the various signalling systems available in the languages they work with . |
2 | The manner in which these principles of linguistic organisation are involved in the real-time learning of languages — whether it is in the case of children learning their native languages , or adults learning second languages — raises many important questions about the way that innate principles and actual experience of language interact to produce the competence that speakers have in the languages they speak . |
3 | There have always been movements of people across the world who have changed the way of life in the lands they have occupied . |
4 | But it was a neat chaos of boxes piled on each other , cakes still in the tins they came in and hatboxes , one of which contained the last remaining ball of her long-ago childhood . |
5 | Now usually in the exams they work it so you ca n't do that cos they give you a graph already drawn and they 'll have sort of erm two squares is equal to one unit along the bottom but only one square equals one unit |
6 | Less tangibly , there was noted in the interviews the tendency for the specialist team members to be somewhat more articulate in the responses they made . |
7 | The great thing about differential equations is that they produce nice smoothly continuous change in the quantities they describe . |
8 | It 's hard now to see how The Shamen will keep the club vibe going in the stadiums they will undoubtedly end up playing , how Colin will avoid the rock postures he hates so much . |
9 | The founding fathers of capitalist enterprise in south-western Germany were not always rich , but the number of those with long family experience in business , and often in the industries they were to develop , is significant : Swiss-Alsatian Protestants like the Koechlin , Geigy or Sarrasin , Jews grown up in the finance of small princelings , rather than technically innovating craftsmen-entrepreneurs . |
10 | Objects will be automatically updated in the documents they 're copied to or host documents as they are updated in the software package they were created in . |
11 | Objects will be automatically updated in the documents they 're copied to or host documents as they are updated in the software package they were created in . |
12 | More important , trade would tie their economies into the global market , allowing them to specialise in the things they do best , and helping governments to consolidate their economic reforms . |
13 | This shift of emphasis , the seeds of which were sown in the 1960s and 1970s , would root teachers much more firmly in the communities they serve . |
14 | Elaborate precautions were also taken to guard against the danger of senior members of the administration becoming , in Reagan 's own words , ‘ captives of the bureaus or special interests in the departments they are supposed to direct ’ . |
15 | Here we find that the manuscripts themselves may vary in the figures they give . |
16 | This change in female initiation patterns is also reflected in the reasons they gave for experimentation with heroin in the first place . |
17 | In the mornings they left the calf outside on the roof , under an upturned basket to stop the crows and vultures swooping down to peck out its eyes , and because sometimes , in winter , the jackals are driven by hunger right up to the houses , even in daylight . |
18 | In the mornings they worked outside in the streets on their ancient pedal machines , raising a loud chorus of whirring . |
19 | They could sense a difference in the days now , sometimes there was almost a rime of frost on the shady side of the woods , and the old pony 's cost was thickening ; in the mornings they went off to school . |
20 | but the only thing was , sometimes you know , the the visitors in the mornings they used to come out , the visitors . |
21 | Miss Chadwick added that they sing two services a week and in addition perform larger choral works in the concerts they stage once or twice a term . |
22 | In the towns they drink wine and liqueurs , but we ca n't do that in the villages … the result is that the gents can drink , but it 's forbidden to the lower classes . ’ |
23 | But in the towns they ran on the streets , just like other trams . |
24 | Apart from rifling the chests of the Excise offices in the towns they had occupied , the Scots had while in England behaved with remarkable correctness , but now they were increasingly described as thieves and ruffians , an attitude epitomised by the verses written about a group of Yorkshire sportsmen who formed themselves into a unit of amateur warriors known as ‘ The Royal Hunters ’ : |
25 | At the same time , he reckons , in the pubs they keep , the big companies would rather sell the product of a small brewery like Belhaven than that of a major competitor . |
26 | In the movies they always seemed to make the kidnapped party drive , but Maxim thought about Dann driving his — Maxim 's — car into the first acacia while he watched the gun , which seemed to have hypnotised him . |
27 | But plans , such as Australia 's aim of 20 per cent cuts in carbon dioxide emissions by the year 2005 , mean that everyone should make that 20 per cent cut in the emissions they generate , directly and indirectly . |
28 | In several respects the specialist library suppliers differ from general booksellers in the services they are able to offer to libraries . |
29 | In Europe and the United States , stations reflected the tone of the areas they served , in their style of architecture , in the services they provided . |
30 | I look to those responsible , including local authorities , to use these resources wisely and to improve the value for money in the services they buy . |