Example sentences of "a part of the [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 A part of the difficulty in leaving county cricket lies in its consuming characteristic .
2 We recommend that citizenship should … be a part of the education of every pupil from the early years through to further and higher education … . ’
3 Much more interesting to be a part of the making of it . ’
4 And none of this would matter Chairman I do n't think er whether E two whether E two was in or out of the structure plan only matters in so far as it bears a part of the making of local plans and the making of planning applications in the county .
5 The Linguistic Survey of Scotland , founded in 1947 , became a part of the School in 1983 .
6 For the whole basis of Sartre 's argument is that the dialectic of history is not a metaphysical law , ‘ some powerful unitary force revealing itself behind History like the will of God ’ , but the continuously produced effect of individual conflicts ; each action is in its turn subsumed as a part of the whole in an ever broader , developing totalization ( I , 37 ) .
7 As part of the audience you are as much a part of the entertainment as the performance itself , and this is something that dramatists are aware of and have always written for .
8 No servant need attend him , and though there might well be music made before the evening ended , a girl singer could not fittingly be a part of the entertainment in the abbot 's lodging .
9 They were made to wartime restrictions , wooden seats and erm mass produced really , erm there was none of the erm cushioned seats at all , that were a part of the feature during th before the war .
10 It is in a sense a part of the issue of children 's language development and links can and should be made .
11 By the end of the evening I had come to feel sorry for the waiters who had so debased themselves by their participation in the comedy ; not because they were cheating the state , but because they never responded to anyone except as an object , a part of the system in which they were trapped .
12 However , the content through which these mathematical skills are taught has a set of messages all of its own and because we live in a capitalist society we can easily be unaware of these messages — about the exploitation of labour , the sexism , the inequalities based on racism and social class — that are all a part of the ideology of capitalism .
13 A part of the ideology of ‘ muddling through ’ was an acceptance of pragmatism in social policy , even a glorying in it , which helped to sustain a distrust of too much expertise , particularly in a scientific field .
14 A part of the history of perceptions of people has been the changes in the labels that have been used over the years .
15 For many years , policy-makers have referred to the need to ‘ overcome the division of Europe ’ , as if the primary wrong were the division and not the domination of the East by Soviet Communism ; as if the Americans were as much a part of the problem as the Russians , rather than its solution .
16 The existence and nature of these special enforcement procedures is such that it is now possible to speak of European human rights law as being a part of the law of the United Kingdom .
17 It is essential , therefore , when one states that European human rights law is a part of the law of the United Kingdom , to note the sense in which that is the case .
18 It is not so in the same way in which the Bill of Rights is a part of the law of the United States of America — no Act of Parliament becomes void because it transgresses the provisions of the European Convention ; no United Kingdom court will or even can issue an injunction to re ; train a government official from acting in contravention of its terms .
19 It is a slogan which , for all its rhetorical flourish and historic associations , has never become a part of the law of Britain .
20 Whilst controversy may continue to rage over the most desirable structure for local government and as to the measure of control which central government should exercise over it , the case for having some such structure as the present as a part of the make-up of the constitution remains an imperative both of history and of modern democratic ideals .
21 Some form of analysis ( which may be more or less explicit ) is necessarily a part of the interpretation of texts , of understanding how a poet or novelist achieves his or her effects , and consequently must figure in the production of accurate writing .
22 ‘ They 're becoming very much a part of the treatment of diabetes these days .
23 I shall always want to be a part of the event in some form or another — as a committee man or hanger — on but as far as captaincy is concerned this is definitely it .
24 But irrespective of whether there was one general factor or two , it was clear that these general factors only explained a part of the variation in images of parties and leaders .
25 ‘ Part of a building ’ will include entering a building lawfully but then going into a part of the building as a trespasser , such as entering the private quarters in a public house which was entered lawfully in the first instance or going behind an unattended counter in a shop .
26 The various buildings on the New Cross site also held a part of the University of London , a teacher education college , and in the late seventies the Laban School of Dancing .
27 Set on a slight , grassy slope in an enclosed corner of the park the sheep look as much a part of the landscape as the leaves on the trees .
28 Today , it is settled entirely , and seems as ancient a part of the landscape as the sea or the fells .
29 JCU , or JCF as it was often called , was very much a part of the build-up of the Canberra force at Binbrook .
30 Enjoy a tour of the Evening Telegraph which brings news to the county and beyond and is very much a part of the way of life in the area .
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