Example sentences of "to [art] public [adv] " in BNC.

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1 The new Accord is unvieled to the public tomorrow at the Berlin Motor Show .
2 The only working watermill in Cleveland opens to the public tomorrow .
3 If a doctor offers a risky and as yet scientifically unproved treatment the GMC surely owes it to the public either to stop the doctor offering that treatment ( outside scientifically valid trials ) or to stop the doctor practising at all .
4 He will appeal to the public today in an attempt to drive home his claim that Britain has an ‘ historic opportunity ’ for a partnership government .
5 After a year 's planning and several weeks preparation , this year 's Chelsea Flower Show finally opened to the public today .
6 THE gardens of Cholmondeley Castle are open to the public today ( noon-5.30pm ) as are those at Reaseheath College , Nantwich ( 2–4pm ) .
7 The bus will be open to the public today and tomorrow from 9.30am to 5pm .
8 About £1 million has been raised for charity by the display and reproduction of the watercolours which the Prince of Wales has painted in recent years but the exhibition which opens to the public today is his first one-man show in Scotland .
9 Move closer to the public rather than further away from them .
10 and she 's not doing any thing nice to endear herself to the public apart from erm , what gran grandma says that princess Diana spends too much time with aids patients
11 ‘ Aberdeen crematorium is well run and efficient and it seemed natural to open our doors and explain to the public exactly what goes on during this most important ceremony . ’
12 Proposals to ease traffic congestion at one of the region 's notorious blackspots will go on display to the public later today .
13 But any thought or consideration given to working men was only part of a larger strategy of appealing to the public generally .
14 Similarly , the case of displays or visible representations , the offence is committed if the material is visible to the public generally , but not , apparently , if it can he seen only by persons inside another dwelling .
15 Things that are not available to the public generally .
16 His easy , natural style made his works compulsive reading and he did much to explain the maritime world to the public ashore .
17 Sites that have extensive ruins open to the public sometimes have one part reconstructed in order to convey an idea of how the whole site may have once appeared .
18 Earlier he said : ‘ On the basis of pessimistic estimates , the increase in dose to the public close to the plant is approximately 10 microsieverts ; the annual average dose in the UK is 2,500 microsieverts . ’
19 For example , salespeople of media space in newspapers which are given away free to the public often encounter the following objection .
20 The work is being carried out on behalf of English heritage , which is planning to open up the Friary to the public once renovation work has been completed .
21 It was eventually taken into state care in 1912 , and has been open to the public ever since .
22 It 's , it , it is a form of accountability of universities to the public really .
23 The centre is also open to the public daily during June , July and August and the first week in September .
24 Dexter sometimes thought the superintendent took the need to be polite to the public too far .
25 Although Rover had reported an operating profit of £27 million for 1987 , after years of heavy losses , covered by government handouts , the chances of privatising the company by an issue of shares to the public still seemed remote .
26 Britain 's best known dogs home opened its doors to the public yesterday after a four-day break .
27 THE Ulster Cancer Foundation 's annual art exhibition and sale opened its doors to the public yesterday .
28 The literature of the castle , published by the 29th Laird of Dunvegan , John Macleod of Macleod , makes the business plain : ‘ Since the castle was first opened to the public more than forty years ago , the number of visitors has risen from a few hundred to tens of thousands ’ — many of them Macleod descendants from the New World .
29 She had received a note that morning while breakfasting at ‘ Mon Repos ’ from Sir Charles Webb-Bowen no less , telling her that she would be called upon to speak third in favour of the motion : ‘ That this Conference believes that better public and press relations would enable Government and Party to get its message across to the public more effectively . ’
30 ‘ Well , we do open to the public now , as you know , but oh ! the bills , and the staff want paying , ’ she said as she showed us to the door .
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