Example sentences of "[conj] [conj] [art] child " in BNC.
Previous page Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
31 | Recent and current work demonstrates incontrovertibly that if a child is adept at segmenting heard speech into sub-word constituents before tackling the task of learning to read , this task will be accomplished much more easily . |
32 | ‘ We are of the opinion that if a child is working hard in school they really should be relaxing and doing other things out of it , ’ she said . |
33 | Later in the will he provides that if no children are born or if they die within puberty then Mucius and Maevius are to be heirs . |
34 | if I strike a child in a manner likely to cause harm it is right that if the child dies I may be charged with manslaughter . |
35 | Moreover , care orders have been obtained on the education ground without much difficulty , the courts often taking the view that if the child was not receiving a suitable education it was likely that the separate care and control test would almost certainly have been satisfied . |
36 | Four : there is a substantial risk that if the child were born it would suffer from such physical or mental abnormalities as to be seriously handicapped . |
37 | It is then assumed that if the child demonstrates a knowledge of the rules for producing or comprehending language in one setting , that knowledge will be transported with the child to any other setting and will be available for deployment in communicative interaction . |
38 | The mother learns that if the child is placed on a pot at these particular times she is likely to avoid having dirty nappies . |
39 | ‘ The Government assumes that because a child is young , less well-qualified teachers are needed , ’ said NUT general secretary Doug McAvoy . |
40 | The ‘ new conservatives ’ have made it worse by arguing , incorrectly as it happens , that since the children of the élite for the most part ( and for both genetic and environmental reasons ) become the élite , then the elaborate process of selection may as well be shortened and a plain hereditary principle reintroduced . |
41 | She writes that while the children were small : ‘ I had a steady stream of private pupils in need of Physics coaching — lessons were on occasion conducted with a baby over my shoulder ! ’ |
42 | and he thinks that while the children are here , he 's responsible for every move . |
43 | He explained that when a child becomes anxious he or she may stop learning . |
44 | A high value tends to be placed on certainty and permanence , so that when a child is removed from his natural parents and rapid rehabilitation seems unlikely , he should not be confused by multiple parent figures or uncertain plans for his future . |
45 | On that basis of the civil law , the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada held in Montreal Tramways v. Leveille [ 1933 ] 4 D.L.R. 337 , that when a child not actually born at the time of an accident was subsequently born alive and viable , it was clothed with all the rights of action which it would have had if actually in existence at the date of the accident to the mother . |
46 | My concern is that when a child is tested for standard sexually transmitted disease , an HIV test is done as a matter of course without informed consent . |
47 | The Child Support er Act says that when a Child Support Assessment is carried out it supersedes an existing court order . |
48 | They assume that when a child hears ‘ Two twos are four , two threes are six ’ that they 've got various pictures in their heads , various ideas onto which to attach these symbols and these words . |
49 | It may be , and often is , that when the child reaches adolescence , his interest for drawing and painting may diminish , and he may take up some other form of self expression , but his early adventures in Painting will colour the whole of his later life . |
50 | And , needing desperately to defend her grandfather , she added weakly , ‘ Knowing he was too old for her , knowing that when the child grew up it would need a younger father … ’ |
51 | Analysis indicated that when the children were grouped into six-month age bands , the difference between the scores from each age band was significant ( p > 0.05 ) . |
52 | Sometimes the agreement at the time of the divorce , or the judge 's order , will say that when the children finish their education , or reach a certain age , the house will sold and the proceeds split between the couple . |
53 | You knew that as the child would , in a moment , move towards the edge of the cliff so , too , would the beautiful angel of God . |
54 | Now if a parent can have introduced the child via nursery school to that amount of other children , then I think there should be very little trauma , but that is n't to say that as the child gets older they do n't have to do things . |
55 | Now if a parent can have introduced the child via nursery school to that amount of other children , then I think there should be very little trauma , but that is n't to say that as the child gets older they do n't have to do things . |
56 | Wealth was not to be flaunted , although as the children grew older they became aware that their father 's circumstances were not the same as those of brother officers who lived only on their Navy pay . |
57 | Another type of game that involves a lot of reading , and where the child is required to process large amounts of information , take decisions on the basis of that information , and see the consequences , is the simulation . |
58 | Do you think of your garden as somewhere to relax , and where the children can play in safety ? |
59 | At this point the Jews were being deconcentrated , were being channelled back into society , and it fell to us to help dismantle and disperse the ghettos , where the light was always failing and where the children all looked so old and full of knowledge , and everybody moved much too slowly or much too fast . |
60 | She is affirming that delinquency is neither an inborn disposition nor something the child has contrived by himself ; that children learn to become delinquents by becoming members of groups in which delinquent conduct is already established and the ‘ thing to do ’ ; and that a child need not be ‘ different ’ from other children , that he need not have any twists or defects of personality or intelligence , in order to become a delinquent . |