Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] [adv] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As the mandroids calmly gassed the beaked exter and carted them both off to be flung into the street , I slid on to one of the unstained seats at the table and cheerfully looked around for a servaton .
2 Gunningham concluded that the acts only reflected the types of control which were economically convenient to industry , and that ‘ since strict enforcement of more severe legislation would attack the very root of capitalism … then any compromise between alternative policies and views is always struck within an area which does not threaten these interests ’ ( Gunningham 1974 : 83 ) .
3 Tornado alerts were broadcast throughout the afternoon but the crowds still hit the pilgrimage trail to the Arkansas capital .
4 Neither the stevedores , the lightermen , the coal trimmers nor the seamen easily accepted the possibility that they might be submerged under an advancing tide of labourers more unskilled than themselves .
5 Gently bend the strips outwards to create the impression of water spray .
6 With two other men he worked his way rhythmically across the sheet , beating the second layer gently with rounded mallets until the starches produced from the pith welded all the strips together to form a sheet , the size of the stone , of white papyrus .
7 During the 1840s , the quaternions soon inspired the manufacture of other consistent number systems which violated the most obvious laws of arithmetic .
8 The waves and the pebbles together constitute a simple example of a system that automatically generates non-randomness .
9 The Fermoys certainly made a mark on the area .
10 The antennae also show a very specific response : they sense only bombykol , and are not stimulated by even very similar molecules .
11 At least it is n't if the clubs still allow the players to take all the prizemoney .
12 That would effectively require another audit to establish the position , because the Vendor would effectively be warranting that even in the light of events which have occurred prior to the Balance Sheet Data but which have come to light up to completion the Accounts still give a true and fair view of the Business 's financial position .
13 The noise of running feet of the many people in the galleries also resembled the sound of falling masonry , which added to the panic .
14 The flames quickly engulfed the entire hangar , lighting up the night sky .
15 Having held off a prolonged second-half challenge from Leicester in Saturday 's cup semi-final , the Quins later learned the Rugby Football Union had rejected Orrell 's appeal for the league game to be switched to Easter Saturday , when Lancashire meet Cornwall in the ADT county final at Twickenham .
16 The climbers later recorded the route in the park headquarters , naming the peak Point Nora Batty , to the disdain of the Park Ranger who suggested the Americans did n't want their mountains named after British politicians !
17 Perhaps the Franks and the Burgundians both gained the epithet " Trojan " at this time .
18 If the shareholders subsequently liquidate the vendor company , there will be a capital distribution within s122 TCGA 1992 , so an additional " layer " of tax will have become payable .
19 The patterns largely reflect the distribution of pigment-containing cells , but some of the colours , like the blues of the peacock 's tail , come from the way the structure of the feathers refracts light .
20 Members of the estates then took a public oath that no trace of these hated documents should be preserved .
21 The collection that New Hall has created reflects the fertility of contemporary women 's art , and in many cases , the artists also continue the time 's characteristic , self-reflexive affirmation of female identity .
22 A lead of sorts has been given by the national archives of north America with the Center for Electronic Records of the National Archives of the United States having already archived in access of 10,000 records or wearying size and complexity , and with the Canadians also pursuing an active of storing governmental records in machine-readable form ( National Archive 1991 ; National Historical Publications 1991 ) .
23 Control individuals show weak staining in the apical region of the enterocytes thereby showing an uptake of PT-gliadin .
24 Faced with the same claims about the effect of words like " fair " , the courts today apply a doctrine of " mistake " which precludes all review of the expert 's analysis , unless the expert values the wrong shares or asks himself the wrong question about concepts such as fairness : see Chapter 13 .
25 The courts however take a commonsense view , rather than a philosophical view , and arrive at apportionments other than 50/50 .
26 As the courts presently interpret the law this purpose is often difficult and sometimes impossible to achieve .
27 In cases of personal injury it has been seen that the courts generally take a broad view of the question of kind of damage and also of the degree of foreseeability necessary .
28 Thus there is generally a presumption that business agreements are intended to be legally binding , and the courts generally accept an element of imprecision in business agreements so that " the dealings of men may so far as possible be treated as effective and that the law may not incur the reproach of being the destroyer of bargains " ( per Lord Tomlin in Hillas v Arcos [ 1932 ] All ER Rep 494 , at p499 ) .
29 Although judicial business was conducted in English and followed procedure alien to pre-British Sri Lanka , people were able to adapt themselves to the new institutions and the courts soon handled a very heavy criminal and civil load .
30 The courts therefore allow the medical profession to set their own standard .
  Next page