Example sentences of "[noun] that [pron] [vb -s] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 One may quibble with some of Jakobson 's distinctions and classifications , but it must be stressed that these are only a small selection of the multitude of relationships that he identifies in the space of this short poem .
2 Apart from a small stain on the edge this came up in almost the bright and shiny condition that it appears in the illustration .
3 ‘ Not only can we match any skin , from lightest to darkest , ’ he says , ‘ but we can give any woman the exact combination of texture , weight and coverage that she wants in a foundation or powder .
4 Again he had the impression that she was a young girl , for there was a smoothness about her skin that one sees in the young before the face reaches the border of adulthood .
5 His vision leads him to seek a saviour that he finds in the proletariat , albeit heavily cloaked in ‘ ideology ’ .
6 Perhaps the best known exponent of this model of general education in the UK is Hirst ( 1969 ; 1974 ) , but it is familiar in most countries , and results in the relatively academic type of secondary school curriculum that one finds in the English grammar school , the French Lycée or the German Gymnasium , with appropriate national differences of emphasis ( the English have always stressed ‘ process ’ rather than ‘ breadth ’ ) .
7 Not every act that he performs in the course of his daily police routine can be ‘ in the execution of his duty ’ within the contemplation of the statute .
8 In contrast to the position in the UK , it is settled law that there exists in the US , at common law , a private right of action for insider trading violations in breach of Rule 10b-5 on impersonal stock exchange markets .
9 In the last two stanzas , Blake is explaining the marks of woe that he sees in the first stanza — but what extraordinary connections to make !
10 The questions that one asks in a survey must be derived from the object of the research itself : the schedule is only a tool for obtaining information .
11 And Beuno said nothing , but he looked at him as mildly as he looks at the trout that he catches in the stream , and the doctor said , ‘ Until tomorrow ’ , and he left , and Beuno watched him go as mildly as he watches the sheep when he frees them from where they are caught in the hedge .
12 In July 1931 he declared that he could not ‘ work with anyone except on the ground that he believes in the guarding of our home market and the development of our Imperial market as absolute essentials ’ .
13 To be worth singling out for special attention , a semantic relation needs to be at least systematic , in the sense that it recurs in a number of pairs or sets of related lexical units ( it will be recalled that the expression lexical unit is used to refer to a lexical form together with a single distinguished sense ) .
14 I am delighted to be asked to deliver Lynda 's speech to such a large body of people committed to helping the disadvantaged and to be able to say a few words about how government is meeting the challenges that it faces in the developing world .
15 The health service does not have a monopoly in cleaning , catering and laundry skills in the same way that it does in the skills required to treat sick people .
16 The homosexual ‘ knows intimately in himself the generality that he finds in the other ’ : ‘ in the homosexual act I remain locked within my body , narcissistically contemplating in the other an excitement that is the mirror of my own ’ ( pp. 307 , 310 ) .
17 ‘ Are you all right ? ’ she asked in the lowered tone that one uses in the darkness .
18 I am following carefully what my hon. Friend says and , like my hon. Friend the Member for Normanton ( Mr. O'Brien ) , I am aware of the deep personal and constituency interest that he has in the matter .
19 An African praying mantis has even more spectacular eye-spots with an almost hypnotic spiral design that it employs in a similar way .
20 To it we owe that nervous , spidery line of the drawings — so quick , so attentive , yet so despairing — that alerts us to the elusiveness of the subject at the same time that it perseveres in the attempt to render it .
21 At the end of the day , Neil has had to come to terms with the fact that he plays in a certain way …
22 The main result that emerges from such an existential self-analysis is that man owes his understanding of the meaning of being to the fact that he exists in an object-transcending manner , and is therefore able to conceive of the possibility of nothingness , i.e. of the world not existing at all .
23 Prior approval is not required ( except in SSSIs and National Parks in the UK , but then not from the Agriculture Department ) and in assessing schemes financially , MAFF has disregarded the fact that it has in the past contributed 50–70% of the scheme 's cost and that a high proportion of the profit to be earned is public money in the form of HLCAs .
24 So the meaning of a sign consists in the bare fact that it stands in an external causal relation to that which we say it signifies .
25 More impressive than the print quality , though , is the fact that it comes in a smaller , faster box at no extra cost .
26 So , the fact that who works in the green grocers is just a bit of additional information , it 's not necessary for the the main part of the sentence , you can take it out and it 's not going to take , make any difference to the construction or the meaning of the sentence , it 's a bit of additional information .
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