Example sentences of "to [art] [noun] [noun pl] ' [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | New pathways , giving a different level of description by spanning existing constituent pathways , can be added according to the knowledge bases ' rules . |
2 | Tourists are now bused in their thousands to the Sellafield Visitors ' Centre , where all the slick techniques of modern exhibitions are brought to bear on radioactivity . |
3 | What we do know , however , is that we were due to finalise proposed changes to the Mountaineering Instructors ' Certificate syllabus at the next meeting . |
4 | Today Cradley announced they were reporting the matter to the Speedway Promoters ' Association . |
5 | In his letter to the auditor , councillor O Muilleoir said the council had ‘ worn a path to the travel agents ' door ’ with trips to Thiepval and other war sites including : June-July 1988 six council representatives ( all unionist ) toured Somme battle sites for one week June-July 1989 , a week long visit to France by four unionists cost £1,984 |
6 | It is possible that if the existence of spare capacity is more statistical than real , a central prop to the inflation optimists ' case will have gone . |
7 | In fact , they whisked me off to the Nanking Workers ' Hospital , where I stayed in ‘ solitary confinement ’ until this afternoon . |
8 | Yes erm well erm and I belong to the Nursery Nurses ' Association . |
9 | We left the car and , armed with NNT permits , headed for a hide belonging to the Norfolk Naturalists ' Trust . |
10 | When triggered by signals from EUCOM , the AFSAT equipment sends a recorded message directly to the cruise missiles ' launch control centres . |
11 | Almost all of them belong to the Choir Schools ' Association , which also has members in Australia , Canada , the Irish Republic , New Zealand and the USA . |
12 | The lack of a licence in Barlow Clowes ' early years may or may not have made a difference to the way investors ' funds were handled during that time . |
13 | It introduces several key changes to the way companies ' results are reported : the p&l account has an entirely new format ; extraordinary items become virtually extinct ; earnings per share will be calculated after any extraordinary items ; any gain or loss on disposal of revalued assets will be calculated with reference to the carrying value , and realised revaluation surpluses will therefore be excluded from the p&l account . |
14 | This was true to some extent in France where , by the turn of the century , it was necessary to articulate more forcefully to the government employers ' opposition to labour legislation in view of ‘ the apparent receptivity of lawmakers to demands from Socialists and organised labour for assistance ’ ( Kuisel , 1981 , p. 20 ) . |
15 | She herself left the Church and is going to leave all her money to the Battersea Dogs ' Home . |
16 | At half past eleven , they all left the house to go to the April Fools ' Midnight Matinee at the Parthenon . |
17 | After that it was on to the theatre for the evening show , then back to the Theatre Girls ' Club for , if they are to be believed , another meal of egg and chips . |
18 | ‘ You 'll soon get the hang of it , ’ and he launched into a story concerning himself and P.L. O'Hara on a motorcycle ride to the Brontë sisters ' vicarage at Haworth . |
19 | In a tough speech to the Crime Reporters ' Association he said the IRA would cease their evil trade if they could see the level of public support given to the police — much of it from the Irish community . |
20 | Others are more optimistic , pointing to the Barclay brothers ' rescue of the European . |
21 | Two thousand supporters marched to the Belfast Magistrates ' Court with the accused who were all found guilty . |
22 | They are one a few sides that have beat them this season , 18:12 the score , music to the Gloucester fans ' ears . |
23 | Sir , I am grateful to the Christmas Critics ' Crowner ( 18th/25th December ) for drawing your readers ' attention to the fate of W J West , perhaps the most victimised author of 1992 , who now awaits sentence on what is poised to become the most controversial book of 1993 , The Crisis in Bookselling . |
24 | Does not that hostility to the charter give the lie to the Opposition parties ' request for freedom of information ? |
25 | It was horrid leaving you two girls in Simla , but within a few weeks — at the end of that term — we were able to have you down with us in Poona , and you went to the Wantage Sisters ' school there , and Tim went too . |
26 | While most of his contemporaries in the conservation world sit behind desks or on committees , Watson and friends race ‘ kamikaze ’ inflatable dinghies in front of Soviet and Japanese whalers ' harpoons or handcuff themselves to the seal hunters ' vessels . |
27 | The evening before , when the boy was buying a betel-leaf from a shop , the police had hauled him up as a vagabond ; they were responding to the jail authorities ' appeal to book more helpers … . |
28 | With regard to the house buyers ' report , the borrower is informed : |
29 | In the form of application in relation to the house buyers ' report it is stated : |
30 | Yes , by the way I 'm gon na be able to see Max , I 'll tell you that now because I 've been dragged off to another conference , I 'm actually going down to the , to the rehabilitation workers ' phones |