Example sentences of "[art] point of [noun sg] of the " in BNC.

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1 63. — ( 1 ) : In every factory in which , in connection with any process carried on , there is given off any dust or fume or other impurity of such a character and to such extent as to be likely to be injurious or offensive to the persons employed , or any substantial quantity of dust of any kind , all practicable measures shall be taken to protect the persons employed against inhalation of the dust or fume or other impurity and to prevent its accumulation in any workroom , and in particular , where the nature of the process makes it practicable , exhaust appliances shall be provided and maintained , as near as possible to the point of origin of the dust or fume or other impurity , so as to prevent its entering the air of any workroom . ’
2 The failure of the product market and the legal model of the company to impose any real limits on managerial power has been the point of departure of the two avenues of corporate law scholarship already outlined .
3 If a radius is drawn from this centre through the corner of the rectangle , the centre of the arc for the smaller flap is fixed automatically at the point of intersection of the radius and the major axis .
4 Stepping up to bat in the eighth inning of game five on Sunday with the scores tied 1-1 , the Giants first baseman had trouble controlling the adrenalin , ‘ but I took a deep breath and tried to focus on the point of release of the ball ’ .
5 On the other hand , it can also be allowed to run its course , carrying the support up to the point of actualization of the infinitive 's event , which produces the " subsequent actualization " sense ( He managed to get free ) .
6 From the point of view of the people of the Gorbals in the Thirties , fox-hunting and psychoanalysis would have been practically indistinguishable concerns of the rich in the Sassenach South , of the ‘ high heid yins ’ of the world — an expression of the poor in Scotland then , which Ralph Glasser uses .
7 From the point of view of the issue of law , there can be no doubt as to the influence both of the constitution of 1937 in the period following its enactment and of the influence of Roman catholic teaching on legislation prior to that date .
8 From the point of view of the experiencing subject , the meaningfulness is not something of which he is conscious ; all he experiences is , first the word ‘ red ’ , then a mental image : there is nothing that could count as his internally and introspectably associating them which does not reintroduce the mysterious generality of thought .
9 So from the point of view of the consumer , there are few tests that can be done prior to purchase , to ascertain how well a product will perform when fitted into the car .
10 Although it is a means of asserting authority , coming as it does at the start of the shift , parade is very relaxed and , from the point of view of the ordinary constables , serves as a way of casually reorientating themselves to the demands of work .
11 The first point that one would want to make in criticism of the gens theory is that , even if descent groups such as the Iroquois gens appear as undifferentiated communities from the point of view of an outsider , this is not so from the point of view of the member of a gens .
12 From the point of view of the outsider the descent group appears as undifferentiated and this will be expressed by statements of the commonality of the resources of claim while , from the point of view of the insider dealing with other insiders the descent group appears highly differentiated .
13 From the point of view of the outsider the descent group appears as undifferentiated and this will be expressed by statements of the commonality of the resources of claim while , from the point of view of the insider dealing with other insiders the descent group appears highly differentiated .
14 Again one must distinguish the point of view of the outsider and the insider .
15 From the point of view of the economy , the outcome of the 1982 health dispute was immensely significant .
16 They look at everything from the point of view of the provider and their only discernible policy is that they are against privatization .
17 I approached the service from the point of view of the consumer , as we had already done to good effect with the opticians .
18 Surely what counts , from the point of view of the person in authority , is not what the subject thinks but how he acts .
19 All the same , if we turn the figures about and look at them from the point of view of the older generation themselves , we still find that in early modern England only 10 per cent of sixty-year-olds were living with their married children or grandchildren .
20 These movements can cause real problems from the point of view of the sense of national identity and citizenship of the migrants and for their relationships with the indigenous populations .
21 Belshaw ( 1979 ) illustrates the contradiction between research station agronomic techniques which favour planting crops in pure stands , and inter-cropping techniques which are by far the most satisfactory from the point of view of the reduction of soil erosion .
22 But it was highly desirable from the point of view of the individual soldiers on both sides .
23 But we have once again slipped back into looking at life from the point of view of the individual organism rather than its genes .
24 Neither Lord Quinton nor any of the professionals involved saw things from the point of view of the reading public .
25 On the contrary , it added to it , and not just in terms of the quality and character of the landscape , but also from the point of view of the wildlife .
26 The second functions from the point of view of the literature itself , and tries to fit actual titles into the ‘ need ’ slots on the shelves .
27 As a result , you may have little practical alternative but to agree to increased working hours or to work in a different area , despite the fact that the contract does not provide for such things , if they are commercially necessary from the point of view of the business .
28 I had seen Cabinets which all the time seemed to be dealing with the day-to-day problems and there was never a real opportunity to deal with strategy , either from the point of view of the Government or the country .
29 On the other hand , if we view the phenomenon of addiction from the point of view of the enforcement officials , they will tell us and we will be bound to report that they believe addicts are criminal types , have disturbed personalities , have no morals and can not be trusted .
30 bring into active play all the possible forces , schools and clubs , etc. , to neutralise and overcome the pernicious influences of ‘ blind alley ’ employment , to insure that , however uneducative and useless a juvenile 's job may be from the point of view of the future , he shall not on that account emerge from it unfitted for any other kind of labour .
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