Example sentences of "often [vb pp] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 Stream of consciousness and a variety of other devices are used to transcribe an inner mental world at the expense of the external social experience most often favoured in the conventional , realistic forms of earlier fiction .
2 The ginkgos are often placed in a separate group .
3 Transactions are often completed in the middle of the night .
4 Transactions are often completed in the middle of the night .
5 I think it is the critical statements , rather than the words of praise , that are more often uttered in the hearing of girls .
6 For years , US judges have relied on the standard , dating back to 1923 and too often honoured in the breach , defining admissible evidence as that which derives from methods of inquiry that are ‘ generally accepted ’ by the scientific community .
7 Family-trees ( genealogies ) similar to this one are often given in the Bible attesting a line of descent .
8 The shepherding within the house church movement has also met a need in people seeking direction , howbeit often given in an over-paternalized way .
9 Braque 's interest in space gives his work an ‘ overall ’ quality , which has ever since remained one of the main features of his style , whereas in Picasso 's painting the attention is usually riveted on the subject while the background or surround is often treated in a simpler or more cursory fashion .
10 This could also be because women with unexplained lower abdominal pain are often referred in the first instance to gynaecologists , who may not consider an intestinal cause until they have removed the pelvic organs .
11 In fact , media education has often developed in a very explicit way concepts which are of general importance in English .
12 The experiences of the First World War , often registered in a feeling of horrific waste , also left a deep impression on the mental landscape of the interwar years and helped to form the low-key response towards crime and hooliganism .
13 The purpose of the organization is often explained in the language of ‘ goals ’ .
14 The musical genius of the Bach family for instance , which was so noticeable , that in that part of Germany where the Bachs lived , the word Bach which actually means brook , started to mean musician , because there were so many of them , er , that kind of inheritance of musical ability , was often explained in the past , as inheritance of acquired characteristics .
15 For the current purpose , demonstrating that they were different is sufficient to illustrate two main points : that understanding a place involves uncovering the multivariate and inter-related nature of its culture , for which the three components of the schema in chapter 3 provide a valuable framework ; and that without understanding the nature of a place in all its complexity , it is difficult to appreciate what happens there during particular events — simple , monocausal explanations ( often located in the sphere of production ) are usually insufficient .
16 A common result is an upward shift of decision making to the new parent company , often located in the south-east .
17 In the inter-war period the two were often mixed in a totally unco-ordinated manner .
18 As we saw in Section 5.3 particularly , the establishment of a genuinely across-the-curriculum study skills programme is one possibility , and further infrastructural changes were also often considered in the wake of the project .
19 These phrases are often embellished in the text with modifiers and slight variations ( often , usually , also , mainly ) which give some extra information to readers of the dictionary .
20 ‘ Herbage ’ was often included in the warden 's farm ; that is , the dues collected for cattle and horses on the king 's forest pastures .
21 The Belouch nomads who roam the borderlands of Persia and Afghanistan are often included in the general Turkoman group , although their rugs are sufficiently different in character and appearance to warrant a separate classification .
22 There are other distinctions and sophistications which are often included in the model .
23 Interdigitating dendritic cells are therefore believed to function primarily as antigen presenting cells , although they are often included in the generic term ‘ macrophages ’ .
24 Remote and closed-off from the spectator , woman is often depicted in a state of reverie or dream , inert rather than physically active .
25 Ancient laws governed who would have rights to watering holes , but the young herders were often caught in the breach , stealing camels and sometimes women , from neighbouring clans .
26 That Commandos and other Special Forces of World War II were superb light infantry , is a fact all too often forgotten in the fashion of the 1970s when every political cut-throat wants to be called a ‘ commando ’ .
27 At all times one is aware that the artist is also a composer — the conviction with which she untangles some of the more complicated , almost obscure pieces , has an unquestionable authority ( the enormous B flat minor Fugue from Book Two instantly comes to mind in this connection ) , whilst the famous pieces are often presented in a totally different manner — the A minor Prelude and Fugue ( Book One ) will surprise many as the Prelude is fearful and serious ( rather than light with the usual staccato touches ) , whilst the Fugue has clipped articulation at the end of each subject entry .
28 But in schools science is often presented in a dry and uninteresting manner .
29 The previous chapter argued that the ideological terms of antislavery were developed in part through contesting a pro-West Indian intellectual barrage , often presented in the rhetoric of national and imperial interest .
30 They are often made in a number of different sizes , like the models already discussed , for the purposes of different kinds of shot .
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