Example sentences of "be [vb pp] in [art] wide " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Finally , perhaps this change of mood can only be explained in the wider context of gradual changes in government policy on the inner city and UDCs — the emergence of a ‘ new realism ’ tempering the policies and rhetoric of the radical right .
2 They 'll cost more because they involve much more material and , in particular , more sewing ; but , for all that , the Flare or the Roller are types that can be flown in a wide range of wind strengths , and are remarkably stable .
3 They must also be considered in a wider context since the need for defences in the civil zones throughout the Empire arose out of the great pressures on the frontiers by barbarian migrations .
4 The effects of these policies on access to schooling have to be considered in the wider context of family income and availability of education .
5 Any question of providing long-term support for children in the family of a man who is not their father should be considered in the wider context of financial provision for families generally .
6 3.2 PSD modules may be included in a wide range of programmes and none are highly specialised .
7 Personal and Social Development modules may be included in a wide range of programmes .
8 Such arrangements have to be seen in a wider context .
9 So Heineken 's recent big-money renewal of their sponsorship of the Heineken National League has to be seen in a wider context than the clubs who belong to the league .
10 By this method the detail of the object will be seen in a wider visual angle and the retinal image will be magnified , a greater part of the retina thus being activated .
11 There is , first , the relationship between rich and poor nations , which may be conceived in terms of neo-imperialism and dependency ( but in that case imperialism has to be seen in a wider perspective than that which treats it exclusively as a stage in the development of capitalism , important though this latter process is ) , or in terms of the current preoccupation with a ‘ North-South dialogue ’ , which is today more a confrontation than a dialogue .
12 Human rights issues , as illustrated by AIDS , have to be seen in a wider context and , conversely , one can not contemplate the totality of public health without the human rights component .
13 The additional challenge of achieving full educational as well as social integration for children now in special schools needs to be seen in the wider context of a major reappraisal of what ordinary schools have to offer the pupils already in them .
14 The primary school curriculum was to go beyond the basics of English and mathematics , which in any case should be seen in the wider context of other subjects .
15 In our view , the impact of out-of-town shopping on the viability and vitality of town centres must be seen in the wider context of the growing imbalance between private and public modes of transport .
16 This is not to say that the contributions which social scientists may make to solving particular technical problems , or enlarging the sphere of rational decision making , should be dismissed altogether ; only that they have to be seen in the wider context of political contestation and choice .
17 Furthermore , Daniel , Bullen and Rockhart , and the student dissertations produced under Rockhart 's supervision at MIT show , in particular , that the really critical factors in any one period are usually relatively few , so that it should not be necessary to establish a massive information bank which can be interpreted in a wide variety of ways .
18 The notion of education was to be interpreted in the widest sense of the word to include physical , moral , and mental training .
19 Ultimately , the DSP 715 is a powerful stand-alone combo , designed to be used in a wide variety of professional situations , yet with the capability , via the 715 ‘ E ’ extension cabinet , of even greater volumes for large capacity gigs .
20 HLA-DR is constitutively expressed on B lymphocytes , some macrophages , dendritic cells , vascular endothelial cells , and some epithelial cells and can be induced in a wide range of tissues in inflammatory diseases .
21 Diary entries can be coded in a wide number of ways allowing activities to be carefully tracked and even accounted for through the built-in billing system .
22 It unites six established British artists who might be linked in a wider definition of The School of London .
23 Students , tutors and the curriculum are supervised by representatives of MSC and unnecessary luxuries like crêches attached to women 's courses are conspicuous by their absence ‘ in case women become dependent upon support services that will not be provided in the wider society ’ .
24 In this way , the ostensibly pro-Zionist sentiments , as well as the ostensible abandonment of crude racism by the Nationalism Today faction , need to be set in a wider argumentative context .
25 It has now been confirmed , however , that Bt is a ubiquitous soil microorganism and that highly active strains of Bt can be found in a wide variety of environmental samples .
26 The specific objectification of a moral and juridical individual through the use of objects may be found in a wide range of societies , including those where kinship rather than the economy appears to be the dominant organizational principle .
27 While TNCs are certainly to be found in a wide variety of economic sectors they share the same basic function of capital accumulation on a global scale , and the same consistent character of having to work out global strategies to ensure their continued growth .
28 Showmen knew that middle-class critics had to be bought off and that topicality could sell films to certain audiences but they also appreciated that audiences were more likely to go to the movies for spectacle , for adventure , for comedy , for sex , to see particular stars , and to be entertained in the widest sense .
29 That fact must be put in the wider context .
30 Held , dismissing the appeal , that the phrase ‘ office or employment ’ in section 16(2) ( c ) of the Act was not confined to the narrow limits of a contract of service but was to be construed in a wider sense as a matter of ordinary language ; and that , accordingly , the provision of services by the appellant as a self-employed accountant was properly described as employment within the ambit of section 16(2) ( c ) ( post , p. 506B–D , E–G ) .
  Next page