Example sentences of "[noun] [pron] [adv] [verb] in [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ The books I most admire in the European tradition are , ’ he says , ‘ 19th century novels by the great Russian writers and by English writers like Jane Austen and George Eliot .
2 When Watkins put forward his observations regarding remnants of prehistoric alignments in Britain he ran head-on into official archaeological thinking which still believed in the Piltdown Man .
3 An interesting entry by the Kildalton minister relates that " The only animals which formerly existed in the parish , but are now extinct , are red-deer and foxes . "
4 An interesting entry by the Kildalton minister relates that " The only animals which formerly existed in the parish , but are now extinct , are red-deer and foxes . "
5 Moreover , Bradley continues , the specific nature of cultural goods , which Adorno recognizes , can not be adequately covered by his argument that the apparent use-value of popular music ( its ‘ immediacy ’ , its status as ‘ art ’ and as a repository of ‘ human ’ feeling , and so on ) is an illusion which actually functions in the service of exchange-value ( it is an aspect of what people buy ) .
6 Proceedings were brought by the revenue which ultimately resulted in a Divisional Court holding that the employees in question were not ‘ male servants ’ within the meaning of the Act .
7 The Conservatives ' desperation to devise a counter-programme for the land , and the disagreements it provoked , demonstrate the degree of confusion which still existed in the Conservative ranks and the immense problems they still faced before the ‘ rampant omnibus ’ of the Great War rescued them by running down their opponents .
8 For example , with us , homicide is the prototype public offence , it is a crime which automatically results in the intervention of the police , whereas most breaches of sexual morality are matters of concern only to members of the domestic household and their close kin .
9 We therefore argued that given the radical nature of women acting as independent agents , action which still flies in the face of dominant ideologies and which challenges the nature of the family , it is astonishing how much progress women have made in this period .
10 Another outsider who probably arrived in the area under Gloucester 's aegis was Ralph Willoughby , a younger son of the Willoughbys of Wollaton ( Notts. ) , who acquired landed interests in East Anglia through marriage to the widow of Henry Castell of Raveningham ( Norf . ) .
11 Another outsider who probably arrived in the area under Gloucester 's aegis was Ralph Willoughby , a younger son of the Willoughbys of Wollaton ( Notts. ) , who acquired landed interests in East Anglia through marriage to the widow of Henry Castell of Raveningham ( Norf . ) .
12 Mr Harper also receives support from Susan Beecham and Liam Johnstone who also assist in the 50 homes they visit in Darlington , Catterick Garrison , Richmond and elsewhere .
13 And , finally , the views of a physicist who also teaches in the field of environmental science :
14 Those on the water included Roger Nelson of the home club who now works in the West Indies and so is only able to sail his canoe one month a year .
15 Saudi Arabia and Egypt clashed through the parties they respectively supported in the Yemen civil war in the 1960s .
16 for all that he has no words he then asks in the most eloquent and elegant way for a tip .
17 Coaches on the way to Hastings made their last stop for horses at Battle 's George Hotel , where the ostler lived in a tiny cottage which still stands in the yard , to be roused by the bell outside his front door .
18 Depiction of the legendary coronation of Charles in Jerusalem , an example of religiously inspired fiction which also appears in the Chroniques de Charlemagne .
19 Further down the chain of linked processes , are all the activities which eventually result in the provision of the product to the final consumer .
20 Control reduces stress , increases objectivity and helps to sharpen focus on activities which really matter in the context of the whole project .
21 Richard Baxter 's Statue which originally stood in the centre of the Bull Ring in Kidderminster .
22 However , people were heard to say that only the Führer himself now believed in a miracle .
23 Every skill I ever learned in the Art of Coarse Acting I learned in that sweaty cloakroom before Double Hockey .
24 Then , scientists worried that if microbes such as E. coli which naturally lives in the human gut , escaped from a laboratory carrying foreign genes , they could colonise the gut and flood the body with protein .
25 FoE 's survey covered UK chemical companies which also operate in the US .
26 Since spermatozoa in ejaculated semen are not yet able to penetrate the egg , the spermatozoa have to undergo careful treatment in the laboratory to achieve the maturation which normally occurs in the female reproductive tract .
27 Here again the old north to south and east to west through-roads were diverted to pass through the new market place , so producing the dangerous corners which still exist in the town today .
28 Galatians 3 , 28 is quoted : ‘ There is neither male nor female for you are all one in Christ Jesus ’ as though sexual differences were subsumed in a common humanity which alone counts in the scheme of redemption .
29 Connery came to Scotland to receive the Freedom of the City of Edinburgh , one of those civic honours which usually passes in a bit of ceremony followed by a bit of dinner .
30 The firm was founded ten years ago by Mr Anderson , an investment consultant who once worked in the tea business , and ex-commodity broker Richard Illingworth , to provide Latin America with seed .
  Next page