Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [adj] [be] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | That 's on the bear That 's on the bear . |
2 | That was in the Mail That was in the Mail . |
3 | The aircraft concerned was in the hangar with one engine removed . |
4 | Paolozzi 's monumental bronze Master of the Universe 1988–9 is in the grounds in front of the gallery . |
5 | I have already mentioned that sixteen of Anselm 's forty-eight surviving letters of the period 1093–7 were about the problems of monks or nuns — a far higher proportion than on any other subject . |
6 | The powers that be at the Tate tend to be more interested in ‘ the modern ’ than in the British tradition , so many fine or interesting British paintings are rarely if ever displayed , and to get through to those that are one has to wade one 's way through off-putting modernist rubbish , with the risk of tripping over artistic piles of bricks or tearing your clothes on sharp bits of dustbin sculpture . |
7 | Trials , however , are a catch-22 situation , since they can only take place if money is available , and the research funding bodies are largely under the control of the powers that be in the medical profession . |
8 | Be this as it may , the emphasis of the ITSFEA 1988 is on the use of deterrent remedies . |
9 | It was used in anger because we were living near Sevenoaks when the V one was over the doodlebugs and er they positioned er one of these barrage balloons just near our house you see . |
10 | A decision by the Germans to leave their interest rates unchanged put the skids under prices in London and the FT-SE 100 was on the slippery slope . |
11 | Three of the Birmingham Six were in the public gallery to hear the judgement . |
12 | They 've always come out , but they always do then check while they 're there to see whether the property concerned is on the list of private , adopted or unadopted and there can be a mixture . |
13 | One of the Model 30 's in the Computer Room has a faulty mother-board , and the cost of repair would be prohibitive . |
14 | The number 6 is for the main carriage — ‘ knit six rows ’ . |
15 | Section 6(4) applies the Law Reform ( Contributory Negligence ) Act 1945 and s5 of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 relating to contributory negligence , to claims under Pt I of the CPA 1987. ( e ) Defences The burden of proof of causation under the CPA 1987 is upon the victim . |
16 | At Brora the date 1895 was on the station building . |
17 | His only blemish on the front nine was at the second hole dropping shots at 14 and 15 brought it to four under but a good birdie at 16 and a level par finish gave him a 66 and the course record by two shots . |
18 | The house concerned is near the footpath from Wagon Road to Scott Wood in Low Dolphinholme . |
19 | It is doubtful whether the Evangelicals , in laying so much stress on the last hour as indicator of the soul 's future state , realised how great a departure this was from the eschatology of the early church . |
20 | One official said ‘ Twenty or so forgeries have turned up so far , but we believe quite a number more are in the system . ’ |
21 | Strangely for one who has been so successful , Charlie has never been inundated by offers from English trainers , although no doubt this is in the process of changing following those Cheltenham wins . |
22 | No doubt this was for the good practical reason that as royal taxation became more frequent separate and additional councils for the church 's own business became more inconvenient : there was a limit to the number of times the clergy could be summoned from their parishes and livings to provincial assemblies in London or elsewhere . |
23 | To claim that Britain has nurtured something in a matter ultimately pertaining to worship ( the choral singing of cathedral and chapel ) which is purified and controlled beyond anything possessed by Catholic Europe , which is purged of excessive artifice and rhetoric ( Continental reviewers consistently find English a cappella performances impassive ) and whose excellence gives Britain a mission these are among the ideas that have been the principal source of British national identity since the Act of Union in 1707 and were a foundation stone of English identity long before . |