Example sentences of "and so [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In any garden one has to think of the practical as well as the more decorative elements and so a shed and compost area were included .
2 There are difficulties assessing the child between the age of 2 and 4 years and so a range of different tests is used in an attempt to tap a wide range of the child 's skills and maintain the child 's interest and motivation to co-operate .
3 Disabled people meet substantial resistance to many choices , and so a range of communication , assertiveness and negotiation skills is needed .
4 As the child grows we aim to educate him or her in the constructive use of leisure time and so a range of extra-curricular activities is offered .
5 Language is made up of units that may be repeated sequentially ( e.g. papa ) or combined recursively ( e.g. Bill saw John in the car ) and so a way of recording competing interpretations is needed which distinguishes between different tokens of the same unit .
6 It was not long before we had to try our swords , as the billhooks had become , on something real and so a row of perfectly harmless Brussels Sprouts were decapitated .
7 Worse , the story is provably false : the decree ( ML 69 = Fornara 136 ) which enacted the raising of the tribute in 425 was moved by Thoudippos — who we know from Isaios ( ix ) was Kleon 's own son-in-law and so a philos .
8 The Editor agreed and so a day or two later my edited statement was published in Burmese on the front page of the New Light of Burma in a translation which U Khin Maung , my talented and faithful Information Officer , approved .
9 The Convention was a treaty entered into by the United States and so a part of federal law pre-empting State rules .
10 And so a dance between the mother and daughter begins .
11 Much to my surprise he was just at the point of actively seeking more support , and so a relationship began between church and community association which has developed and grown … as has , incidentally , the friendship between their respective leaders .
12 And so a couple of hours later , it was Burkett who drove the coach and four to the top of Dunmail Raise while Hope and Sylvia walked behind to spare the horses the effort , even though , as Burkett had pointed out , two passengers were light work for four horses .
13 Any change in position could be attributed to external factors , and so a defence of one 's own consistency could be mounted , whilst apparently changing sides from loyalism to republicanism .
14 By 1923 , the rise of the Saudi Kingdom presented a new threat to stability , and so a convention fixed the border between the emirate of Kuwait and Iraq , which had just been created under a British mandate .
15 On the other hand , this conclusion is not universally accepted ( Gilbert and Strebel , 1987 ; Buzzell and Gale , 1987 ) and so a company would be wise to study the extent to which separate or continued ‘ generic ’ market strategies determine profitability in its particular industry .
16 Stubbs makes some effort to link the conventions for the use of writing to general linguistic characteristics of writing , but finds it difficult to establish any hard and fast rules since different cultures see different characteristics as significant and so a variety of literacies has been developed .
17 Law had indeed already done enough as leader to make his departure unthinkable and so a memorial was drawn up by Carson and signed by almost all the party 's backbenchers , stating full confidence in Law and begging him to stay on with a revised tariff policy .
18 Known as London Fields , Angela and Matthew Flowers had intended to use it for storage , but the appeal of the space suggested a more imaginative solution and so a proportion will be employed for changing exhibitions or for more permanent installations by gallery artists .
19 His father was probably steward of the king of Scotland as earl of Northampton , and so a baron of some standing , but not a tenant-in-chief ; Gilbert 's brother or nephew rose by marriage into this rank .
20 Learning how to translate unfamiliar letter strings into phonological form is just like learning to read non-words aloud , of course : and so a procedure for reading non-words aloud may be a crucial aspect of learning to read .
21 And so a Harlow councillor who was elected in nineteen eighty eight , yeah ?
22 Ageism seems to be partly triggered off by a fear of becoming old and dependent , and so a reluctance to identify or even empathise with the oldest people .
23 will give me minus and so a minus one times a ten gives us a minus ten .
24 Concepts , criteria , definitions , and their implications seem at first just verbal and so a matter of convention or even arbitrary .
25 Experience showed , he said , that the proportion which debts recovered bore to the cost of the court proceedings was less than one in twenty , and so a burden on trade and business .
26 It is easier for the lecturer to write than for the student to look at a distant blackboard and then back to his so-called " notes " , and so a phase difference develops between the blackboard and the class .
27 This means that a dominant rat can be identified by its call , and so a rat colony can maintain its hierarchy without unnecessary fighting .
28 and so a woman having a child on her own without a partner I think that 's that 's the biggest fear that th erm that society sees in artificial insemination of any kind .
29 However , the speed of light is roughly the same in the cornea as in water , and so a fish 's cornea simply protects the eye without bending the light .
30 The evolution of integrated circuit technology has been such that you 've been progressively able to put more and more transistors down on a single integrated circuit , and so a microprocessor has got more and more powerful with the passage of time .
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