Example sentences of "be at the [adj] heart " in BNC.
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1 | In the Reich the various German patriotic societies were designed to combat ‘ Jewish influence ’ , which was seen to be both ethnically alien and racially inferior , and also to be at the very heart of the economic change that at once afflicted and enriched German society . |
2 | In speeches on April 15 , United Kingdom Prime Minister John Major maintained that the UK 's participation in the EBRD " underlines our commitment to be at the very heart of Europe " [ see also p. 38115 ] and that the UK government 's privatization programme had helped financial companies in London to " build up a wealth of experience from which to draw " , while Mitterrand declared : " A new order has been put in place . |
3 | The decisions arrived at are at the very heart of the success or failure of the Created God to be the foundation of the Alternative Religion . |
4 | These aspects of belief are at the very heart of the Eucharist itself . |
5 | Here , you are at the very heart of this beautiful city , staying in not so much a conventional hotel , as a comfortable home from home where your welcoming hosts are Signor and Signora Farnetani . |
6 | ‘ … the notion of value within science is at the philosophical heart of scientific administration , just as truth is at the heart of the practice of science ’ . |
7 | Data integration is especially a problem for geographers because information synthesis is at the very heart of the discipline . |
8 | Spelling is at the very heart of information technology but , so far in IT Year , it has been largely ignored . |
9 | It is the ability and willingness to make this mental effort that is at the very heart of the success or failure of the human race to create a viable religion . |
10 | This pleasure would appear to have been remote from the adult satisfactions mentioned in the previous paragraph and is a manifestation of the ‘ joie de vivre ’ which is at the very heart of the urge for life , which is itself the product of ‘ desire ’ as introduced and discussed in the Second Period . |
11 | Even more important than the nature of the upper is the midsole , for that is at the very heart of the boot 's performance . |
12 | This principle is at the very heart of all the recommendations relating to drama within the English curriculum that are put forward in this chapter . |
13 | The difference is at the very heart of the plot . |
14 | But as we have seen , this is at the very heart of the problem of the survival of free institutions , because if this policy is pursued it would be impossible to stop the drift to totalitarianism . |
15 | Christians would claim that this parable is at the very heart of the meaning of prayer . |
16 | This column is genuinely not written with a sense of criticism , but I believe it does demonstrate one of the problems that is at the very heart of British tennis — lack of a sense of vision , a sense of belief and a passionate desire to achieve at the very highest echelons of the world game and not to be content to make a comfortable living in a relatively small pond . |
17 | But this balance of opposites is at the very heart of the High Elves ' concepts of rulership — being ruled by a single all-powerful dictator would be unthinkable to them . |
18 | Energy is at the very heart of the longest of these pieces , the Commonwealth Christmas Overture , which brings a riotous conclusion to the disc . |
19 | Like Benno Moiseiwitsch , Cortot confessed to a special affection for Schumann , whose music is at the very heart of romanticism . |
20 | And freedom is at the very heart of the idea that is America . |
21 | It is because this garret is at the very heart of Government . |
22 | An image of the Great Chain of Being was at the very heart of him ; he often had considerable difficulty in marshalling the arguments for apostasy . |
23 | Scott Gibbs , whose midfield tackling was at the very heart of the Welsh win , has always struck one as having tremendous potential , but he has before now been roundly censured for his use of the ball after a break . |