Example sentences of "in [art] more recent " in BNC.

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1 During the forties and early fifties these , plus the romantic songs evoked by wartime partings , loss and refindings , found a worthy competitor in the more recent folk-songs of America , which were borne out of economic collapse ( on the white hand ) , and subservience and racialism ( on the black ) .
2 In the more recent squad of 35 the figure was up to four after Sale 's David Baldwin had been brought in as cover for Dooley .
3 It is a period which has not yet manifestly reached its climax ; and in the more recent past it has been characterised in Britain , as elsewhere , by a marked increase in the use of firearms .
4 The academics had earlier studied chapter 11 between 1978 and 1984 ; the amounts gained by shareholders at the expense of senior creditors were even higher then than in the more recent cases .
5 However , this volume , which appeared in 1916 , can remind us how techniques of archaeology have changed over this century , since the volume included hardly any of the small and often illegible coins which have been found and published in the more recent ( 1981 ) volume of Sardis finds .
6 There are idyllic memories , especially in the more recent interviews , of holidays in the countryside , learning to grow vegetables or brew beer , and bringing home fruit from the farm .
7 Ackner , L. J. in the more recent case of A. Lambert Flat Management Ltd. v Lomas pointed out the need for the defendant to have encountered some ‘ special difficulty ’ preventing compliance with the nuisance order , such as illness , or non-receipt of the notice .
8 The Company however was not willing simply to spend money , but intended to have somewhat closer control than had been the case in the more recent past .
9 However , in the more recent evaluation of NAEP , which seems preoccupied with the needs of researchers rather than policymakers , Wirtz and Lapointe ( 1982 ) maintain that more effort is needed to interpret results and suggest an independent council to carry this out .
10 I am encouraged to see that in the more recent case of Ensign Tankers v. Stokes the House of Lords has now rejected the notion that the mere fact that a transaction is undertaken for the purpose of obtaining a fiscal advantage compels the court to ignore and nullify all the fiscal consequences which are beneficial to the taxpayer .
11 Apart from the battle of Qadesiyah in AD 637 during the original advance of Islam , so frequently invoked by Iraq as a source of inspiration in the more recent conflict with Iran , Persians and the inhabitants of what is today Iraq have been making forays into one another 's territory for centuries .
12 Volcanic landforms are considered more specifically in the classic work by Cotton ( 1944 ) and in the more recent books by Ollier ( 1988 ) and Green and Short ( 1971 ) .
13 This undertone of political symbolism is less overt in the more recent paintings , which effect a happy marriage between Western abstraction and Eastern ornamentation .
14 This undertone of political symbolism is less overt in the more recent paintings which effect a happy marriage between Western abstraction and Eastern ornamentation .
15 Peasgood , in a more recent exercise , described how studies of subject use in an academic library revealed considerable variations , and led to changes in allocations policy .
16 In a more recent book , Law 's Empire , Professor Dworkin returns to this concept :
17 In a more recent book he suggests that the gospel was also made available as widespread and cheaply as possible by a novel process .
18 But in a more recent study , in which AMPA or quisqualate were used as agonists to avoid problems associated with the uptake and possible nonspecific actions of L-glutamate , a slow-onset increase in sensitivity was detected .
19 In a more recent conversation with his mother she was still worried about him despite good reports from the school and the fact that ‘ he now speaks both languages all right ’ .
20 Yet , Lyons , in a more recent statement on the nature of reference , makes the following point : ‘ it is the speaker who refers ( by using some appropriate expression ) : he invests the expression with reference by the act of referring ’ ( 1977 : 177 ) .
21 In a more recent application of this framework , Aglietta ( 1982 ) has explicitly brought out the underlying spatial conception of his theory .
22 In a more recent study , Gray and Jenkins et al.
23 In a more recent study , John H. Goldthorpe et al .
24 In a more recent contribution to the debate Gordon Marshall , Howard Newby , David Rose and Carolyn Vogler have rejected Crompton and Jones 's views that clerical work has been deskilled .
25 An example occurs in a more recent film , When Harry Met Sally … ( 1989 ) , where a period feel is aimed at in the earlier parts of the film though the period is as recent as 1983 .
26 However , in a more recent study Nyman and Silberston cast some doubt on the growth of management control , reporting that as high a figure as 56.25 of the top 250 companies in the UK were still controlled by shareholders , and concluding that ‘ the extent of managerial control is more limited than has been thought and may not have an inexorable tendency to increase .
27 In a more recent study in West Cornwall , Dean et al .
28 In a more recent case it was said that the evidence called must be commensurate with the seriousness of the allegations made ( per Butler-Sloss LJ in R v Birmingham CC , ex pP [ 1991 ] 1 WLR 221 ) .
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