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

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1 The main emphasis of Hume 's book is the inter-relationships between nutrition , reproductive performance and life histories of marsupials .
2 Sir Bernard Tomlinson was asked by the government last October to advise on the organisation of and the inter-relationships between the NHS and medical education and research in London .
3 Among the Cambrian deuterostomes , the echinoderms have a good fossil record , and the inter-relationships between many of the supposedly disparate classes are becoming clearer .
4 Major topics in this literature are marital happiness , the division of labour and the general patterning of husband-wife roles ; the combination of women 's employment with marriage , and its consequences for husband-wife and mother-child relationships ; the inter-relationships between the nuclear family and the wider kinship system ; and the ‘ captive wife ’ syndrome — the socially isolated situation of women with young children .
5 This brief examination of the inter-relationships between family , migration and urbanization should serve to illustrate the point that it is often difficult to establish any clear pattern of causation .
6 The inter-relationships between the flows will be at the centre of the proposed research .
7 It explores the inter-relationships between official policy and professional practice and their adaptation to each other .
8 Consistent with the commitment of the ESRC programme to an investigation of the inter-relationships between ‘ government ’ and ‘ industry ’ , ( of both academic importance and practical relevance to an understanding of industrial competitiveness and performance ) the research team--multidisciplinary in composition--will attempt to chart the shifting terrain of US and British telecommunications policy making in the wake of important technological and political changes .
9 The inter-relationships between the parts are of crucial significance .
10 It is possible to make assumptions about the inter-relationships between the data , but it is obviously better to base these assumptions on thorough analysis .
11 Most of the current partnerships in further and higher education ( FHE ) are of this nature , even if the inter-relationships of the parties are complicated , even complex , because the employer contribution usually relates to the financial state of the firm and this may change abruptly .
12 Borowski 's magnificent collection of ancient seals , figurines , ivories , mosaics and sarcophagi , spanning six millenia , is laid out chronologically , in one continuous trek specifically arranged by American designer Clifford LaFontaine to emphasise the inter-relationships of cultures and ideas .
13 The inter-relationships of serum IGF-I , IGFBP-1 , and insulin in children with active Crohn 's disease .
14 The first aim is to document the inter-relationships amongst children 's ethnic identity and preference , self esteem , and sociometric ( friendship ) status in the classroom .
15 The criticism that Elliott and Ebbutt make of this approach is three fold : values underlying judgements are not revealed ; the analysis is atomistic and ignores the inter-relationships among features of a school 's activities ; and areas are inevitably ignored .
16 Full appreciation of place will involve exploration of the inter-relationships among the physical environment , the built environment , and the people .
17 Tenderly responsive to the self-deceptions of others , he was unfortunately too well able to understand his own .
18 Aunt Bridget entertained most of the womenfolk of the village to another sit-down feast , and Polruan challenged Polperro to a hurling match " to the country " , the result of which was a draw .
19 They are wooden galleries beneath extended eaves in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century farmhouses , and were probably designed for storage purposes originally , but were undoubtedly used in summer by the womenfolk in their cottage industry of spinning the wool of the local Herdwick sheep with spinning wheel and distaff .
20 After making first animal feed ( korm ) and only later cabbage soup ( shchi ) for the family , she may finally turn to the work that occupies the womenfolk from November until Lent — spinning flax from that blue-flowered , frail-leaved plant plucked by the root in handfuls in the August of 1921 .
21 The majority of potentially battle-winning systems are pursued at or beyond the frontiers of existing technology where the risks of failure are high ; where cost estimates are notoriously uncertain ; and hence where the judgments of the soundest and most experienced men can turn out to be fallacious .
22 The principles of credit rating are immutable , they insist ; their credit opinions are never swayed by the judgments of others .
23 The judgments of God fall upon his enemies .
24 It is not necessary here to weigh the relative merits of successive waves of public sentiment , and it is too early to guess the judgments of history , but differences between American and British obscenity law can be assessed on their technical merits , and the consequences are significant .
25 The Charters agreed by the Allied Powers which set up the International Military Tribunals at Nuremberg and Tokyo and the judgments of those Tribunals made it clear that everyone , from the lowest private soldier to the highest general and statesman is required to comply with the humanitarian spirit and the generally accepted principles of the laws of war .
26 The difficulty encountered by the expertise theory in trying to demonstrate the legitimacy of corporate managerial power by showing that there are restraints on the discretion of the managers stems from its attempt to combine a deference to the judgments of business managers with an insistence that corporate managers are subject to fiduciary duties that prevent them from exercising their power for their own purposes or for other non-corporate ends .
27 Oliver LJ 's dissent seems more in tune with the decision of the European Court in Factortame II than are the judgments of the majority in Bourgoin .
28 It is not surprising to find , underlying the judgments of all the experienced Queen 's Bench judges who have grappled with this problem , a feeling of acute concern about the situation thus revealed .
29 Very properly there was extensive discussion in the judgments of Barnett J. and the Court of Appeal of the English decisions on this recently-developed aspect of criminal procedure .
30 L. 41 ) , provided the main inspiration for the argument of Woolwich , and the judgments of the majority of the Court of Appeal , in the present case .
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