Example sentences of "[art] house of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Philip , understandably , selects those passages revealing his uneasy situation in the house of Cis and Elfed .
2 In Philip Burton 's version , from then on , all was sweetness ; Richard occasionally went back to the house of Cis and Elfed ( on Sunday mornings ) and the two of them got on with the transformation of the street boy into the stage man .
3 On March 31 the parliament of the Isle of Man , the House of Keys , bowing to international pressure , lifted legislation prohibiting homosexual sex .
4 F. W. de Klerk was sworn in on Sept. 20 , 1989 , as the new executive President , chosen on Sept. 14 ( following elections on Sept. 6 to all three houses of the tricameral Parliament ) by an electoral college composed of 50 members of the House of Assembly , 25 members of the House of Representatives , and 13 from the House of Delegates [ see pp. 36880-81 ] .
5 The President is chosen by an electoral college composed of 50 members of the House of Assembly , 25 members of the House of Representatives and 13 from the House of Delegates [ see pp. 36880-81 ] .
6 On Oct. 30 a controversial measure giving blanket immunity to anyone who had committed a politically motivated crime before Oct. 8 , 1990 [ see p. 39037 ] was approved by the President 's Council and thus became law , despite its having been rejected on Oct. 20 by the House of Delegates , the Indian chamber of the tricameral parliament .
7 Do you recall the story of Jesus at the house of Simon the Pharisee ?
8 In the house of Simon the Pharisee ( Luke 7:36–50 )
9 In the House of Simon the Pharisee ( Luke 7:36–50 )
10 Jesus was invited to dinner at the house of Simon the Pharisee ( see also Luke 11:37 ; 14:1 ) .
11 The anointing takes place in the house of Simon the leper , which was in Bethany .
12 As their search became more frantic they found themselves aided by Bismarck , who in February 1869 gave his support to a Prince belonging to the Catholic branch of the House of Hohenzollern .
13 Here , however , lay the crux of the matter , for the King of Prussia and his government maintained that they had never been officially associated with Leopold , whose activities were purely personal , and that the King was concerned with the matter only as head of the House of Hohenzollern .
14 The House of Mattli is expanding from couture into ready-to-wear and one of the big Bristol stores , Taylors , are putting on a show to publicise the fact that they will be stocking the new prêt-à-porter ' , Arlene explained .
15 One lunchtime when she had been at the House of Mattli for a few months Paula went there for her usual coffee and the cottage cheese salad that was her staple diet now that it was so important that she did not add a single half-inch to her wand-slim figure .
16 A system of military service had been introduced for Turkish Muslims in Anatolia in the early days of the House of Osman .
17 At the pinnacle of power the sultan owned all the lands in ‘ the domain of the House of Osman ’ and was the absolute master of all who dwelt therein , whether Muslim or Christian .
18 Matters came to a head during the reign of Selim III ( 1789–1807 ) , the reforming sultan , described by Geoffrey Lewis as ‘ one of the most enlightened members of the House of Osman ’ .
19 The house of Baskerville , the eminent Birmingham printer , was sold in 1788 and the seven acres of land that surrounded it were advertised as ‘ a very desirable spot to build upon ’ .
20 Examples of underpresenting lots at Sotheby 's included lot 9 , ‘ Three figures at a table ’ by a follower of Caravaggio , which found its own price at £105,000 ( $168,000 , est. £20,000–30,000 ) ; lot 12 ‘ Christ in the house of Martha and Mary ’ by Vasari , ‘ the cheapest Vasari I 've ever seen ’ , was one comment , which made £9,000 ( $14,400 ) ; and lot 92 , ‘ The Annunciation ’ , a late work by Procaccini which made £92,000 ( $147,200 , est. £20,000–30,000 ) .
21 In a corner of the Salon Imperial of the Hotel Intercontinental , Paris , Harriet Varna braced her back against a statuesque pillar and looked steadily into the viewfinder of her camera , concentrating on her subjects so fiercely that she was almost oblivious to the electric atmosphere that surrounded her , bouncing off the Viennese décor and the sumptuous rococo ceiling along with the heat and the light as the models of the House of Saint Laurent moved gracefully along the hundred yards of catwalk to display the new season 's couture collection .
22 The Ten Commandments began : ‘ I am the Lord your God , who brought you out of the land of Egypt , out of the house of bondage .
23 I am the Lord your God , who led you out of the Land of Egypt , out of the house of bondage .
24 The initial idea of God as the one who led the people ‘ out of the house of bondage ’ , who freed the Israelite slaves from Egyptian control , develops into an idea of God as one who made the heavens and the earth .
25 The Mosaic Law underlines the fact that their whole social , religious and daily life must be governed by loyalty to that one God who brought them out of the land of Egypt , out of the house of bondage .
26 On his first sea-voyage , as the ship lay in the harbour of Las Palomas on its way to Santa Barbara , he had woken to the sound of words in his ear perhaps inspired by the strange familiarity of the house of Los Xicales , glimpsed from the ship , perhaps indeed a prophecy that he would meet the girl of his memory in that very house .
27 The royal family , in the House of Ipatyev , had already been brutally murdered eight days earlier .
28 But still the house of Eli has not seen the last of it .
29 The report had been prepared by a working party set up in 1986 by the House of Bishops and chaired by Reverend June Osborne .
30 Mr. Michael Latham presented a Bill to abolish the General Synod of the Church of England , on a date to be appointed ; to provide for the creation of a Church of England Assembly , consisting of a house of all diocesan , suffragan and assistant bishops , and a joint house of clergy and laity , to be directly elected by all Church of England clergy and lay persons on parochial electoral rolls ; to make provision for the Diocese of Sodor and Man ; to empower the Assembly to decide on all appropriate matters , except those within the legal responsibilities of the Church Commissioners , without further reference to Parliament ; to provide for the election of new bishops by members of the house of bishops , saving the right of final approval of the chosen candidate by the Crown ; to abolish the Ecclesiastical Committee ; to abolish the automatic places of bishops in the House of Lords ; to permit ordained clergy of the Church of England , with the consent of a diocesan bishop , to seek election to the House of Commons ; and for connected purposes :
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