Example sentences of "[conj] of [art] way " in BNC.
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1 | At birth , Piaget sees the infant as having no a priori knowledge of her environment or of the way in which she can act upon it . |
2 | The best example of this and of the way in which Switchboard tends to mirror the mainstream gay ( and still mainly male ) community lies in the organization 's response to AIDS . |
3 | As an analysis of the nature of the child in the primary years and of the way children learn , the Plowden Report ranks as the most detailed study of the early years of schooling ever produced . |
4 | In the face of even further diversion of financial resources for training away from special needs , can we build on what expertise we have to find economic and yet effective ways to overcome the present difficulties , to deepen all teachers ' understanding of learning and behaviour problems and of the way in which they might be resolved within the learning situation of the classroom ? |
5 | The little stone winked like a red star in the firelight and Carrie thought of Mrs Gotobed , suddenly ; of the time she 'd had tea with her and of the way the flames danced in her rings as she stroked the silk of her dress . |
6 | What impressed her most of all was his knowledge of the town itself , and of the way a town functions . |
7 | These include a consideration of the history of the migratory process , the impact of returnees and migrant remittances , the consequences of various international aid projects , and of the way in which Pakistan 's economy as a whole has become increasingly dependent on migrant remittances . |
8 | This is a result of the increased knowledge of the biochemistry of life and of the way in which individual characteristics are transmitted from one generation to another . |
9 | From the experience of voluntary bodies and of the different local authority departments concerned , much was learned about the difficulties of families and of the ways in which they could be helped . |
10 | His biggest problem was that because of the way things work in academic life , regardless of whether or not I changed my lectures from one year to the next , I was just about unsackable . |
11 | Alcohol affects women and men differently because of the way their bodies are made , so remember that for women the sensible drinking limits are lower . |
12 | They suffer from the drawback that warping can leave open gaps in the cladding ( waney-edged boards are particularly prone to this because of the way they are sawn ) , and so they tend to be used more on out-buildings than on house exteriors , except as feature panels . |
13 | Understandably , the courts are more willing to review a decision because of the way in which it has been reached than because of its actual merits , or lack of them . |
14 | The packaging of imported products has continued to fascinate him , for intrinsic qualities — — the names , the colours and the designs — but also no doubt because of the way products from far away have been integrated into the domestic Mexican environment . |
15 | Bert Millichip , the FA chairman , withdrew England 's application for the clubs to be allowed back into Europe largely because of the way incidents involving English fans , the Dusseldorf police and young Germans looking for trouble had been reported by the press and TV back home . |
16 | CARL PREAN has written to the English Table Tennis Association asking to be omitted from future ranking lists because of the way they are determined . |
17 | I always come back to the Stones when I think of The Smiths , because of the camp , but mainly because of the way each band illuminates their era for us . |
18 | She did n't like Jack because of the way he spoke , broad Yorkshire . |
19 | Crenshaw is a champion because of the way he is ; Faldo , too , probably because of his contrasting attitude . |
20 | I just want to know if your anger is because of the way the project has absorbed me lately , or if it 's simply the ill-mannered forgetfulness I showed last night — which I do n't deny , and for which I again apologize . ’ |
21 | But I suspected you were — well , feeling the way you did because of the way I 've been wrapped up in work , rather than because of any change in your condition . ’ |
22 | ‘ It took her six years to mention the second child to me , and because of the way she 's been towards me , I 've never had an avenue to find out whether he was my son or not . ’ |
23 | Because of the way she did it , they said of Madame , ‘ That woman knows what she 's singing about , ’ and this expression became a common one . |
24 | I 'm not into the club scene at all , though that 's less through preference than because of the way things have worked out . |
25 | Because of the way Dr Kitzinger 's study was set up , she was not able to do anything about the stories she was told . |
26 | Because of the way in which it began , Christianity inherited the peculiar Jewish view of time with its hope of redemption from successive oppressors . |
27 | The crystals of salt look different from those of , say , sugar because of the way the molecules assemble . |
28 | So measures of poor welfare include finding that , because of the way an animal is kept or treated , it is not able to live as long or finding that it is not able to grow or is not able to breed . |
29 | Because of the way most bureaux are structured , it is usually hard for the advice worker to remain blissfully unaware of the length of the queue . |
30 | If this image has changed because of the way the media has portrayed female crime , and linked liberation with violent crime , then women are liable to be treated more severely by the police and the courts . |