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

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1 The operating stage that follows represents a permanent addition of 1000 people , together with their families , and also , most important of all , a substantial financial contribution in the form of the taxes Electricite de France must pay to the parishes .
2 The exam itself has been the subject of considerable dispute , with accusations that not only is the marking inconsistent and some of the markers corrupt , but that the DET and the homelands education authorities frequently ‘ move the goalposts ’ by altering the pass levels year by year .
3 This has the advantage that it does not require the pilot to remember any special movement of the controls other than the movement forward to unstall .
4 The American revivalist hymn ‘ Amazing Grace ’ ( c. 1800 ) is an excellent example of the symmetries Maróthy ascribes to bourgeois song ( Maróthy 1974 ) .
5 A claim to surrender ACT may be made within six years of the end of the accounting period to which it relates , and requires the consent of the subsidiaries concerned .
6 Whether it was attitudes or setting or relevance to modern life , you know , to what extent are some of the stories relevant to their time and place , and not to our time and place , so that might be an interesting area to explore .
7 The stage is high , deterring those who see the stage as their personal Kuwait and giving the laser-lit silhouettes of the Inspirals real presence when they arrive to a pre-recorded keyboard and mooing groove .
8 One of the errors attributable to constructivist rationalism has been to view law as a prescription posited by authority ; that is , of equating law with legislation .
9 Because of the variable nature of the factors contributing to manoeuvre-induced instrument errors , it is not possible to give positive guidance as to the magnitude — or even sense — of the errors likely to be encountered during a given manoeuvre .
10 In particular , he was warned of the errors likely to be associated with naive projections of past accounting profit calculations , whether based upon historic or upon current costs .
11 The contrast can not be explained entirely in terms of personalities ; nevertheless the characters of the rulers concerned were of great importance in this connexion .
12 The priorities that produce the recall of particular themes doubtless relate to the histories of the persons concerned .
13 This is , of course , bound up with the personalities and attitudes of the persons concerned and the history of their relationships .
14 Generally , though , the heirs are not identified ; in any case such entries are sporadic except in Cornwall , where the Celtic custom of partible inheritance caused them to be widespread , and incidentally obliterates the trail of the persons concerned in a great many cases .
15 In order to ensure , as far as possible , the equality and uniformity of the rights and obligations under the Convention of the contracting states and of the persons concerned , the nature of that connection must be determined independently .
16 As Figure 4 shows the resulting computer output has three sources of expertise , that of the programmer , of the persons responsible for developing the database of standard prices , and of the person using the system .
17 The dephosphorylation of pNPP by the CL100 protein displays many of the properties typical for the known protein-tyrosine phosphatases .
18 The company was forbidden from selling any of the properties free from the mortgage or from granting leases for more than 3 years without the consent of the mortgagee .
19 ‘ ( a ) in satisfaction of all costs charges and expenses properly incurred and payments properly made by the bank or the receiver and of the remuneration of the receiver ; ( b ) in or towards satisfaction of the moneys outstanding and secured by this deed .
20 Some of the problems inherent in the sociological study of crime are illustrated in the first reading in Chapter 5 ( pages 76–77 ) .
21 It is vital to face up to some of the problems inherent in the situation and to be as honest as possible about all the relationships involved .
22 Recognition of the problems inherent in identifying features led to new ways of thinking about vision and to new ways of analysing the ways celts in the visual cortex respond to visual events .
23 Such comprehensive supervision and reporting can actually reduce client costs , and relieve clients of the problems inherent in cleaning any premises .
24 Jacobitism is not an easy subject to study , because of the problems inherent in the sources .
25 This allows estimation of history , etc. , effects ; but , even without such a control , the existence of observations extending on either side of X may permit elimination of some of the problems inherent in the simple O 1 →X→O 2 design of Chapter 15 .
26 As you will be well aware , as a member of housing committee , we do actually have faced a substantial crisis in terms of the availability of land which we can make available for building , that is one of the problems , possibly a short term problem , but nonetheless one of the problems key ones , which we face here .
27 Montrose 's chiastic formulation of the historicity of texts and the textuality of history ( chiasmus is a rhetorical balancing created by the reversal of one concept by that succeeding it ) is indicative of some of the problems New Historicism 's methods share with the anthropological methods for reading cultures which New Historicism adopted .
28 But it is precisely this problematic relationship between language and reality that instead of rendering the term theoretically redundant exemplifies one of the problems implicit in all urban social theory but addressed only occasionally .
29 More important are some of the problems implicit in it .
30 It also raises some of the problems endemic to grid technique : the limitations imposed by verbal labels and the difficulty posed by constructs that are not relevant to certain elements .
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