Example sentences of "[noun] [adj] look at [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Figure 2.3 looks at a similar period for Europe .
2 Figure 8.7 looks at the way in which all religions have available within them certain fault-resistant features which is why their demise , so confidently predicted by many who see their grave faults and failures , rarely seems to happen !
3 Chapter 11 considers appropriate procedures for conducting a reference and Chapter 12 looks at the means of enforcing experts ' decisions .
4 Chapter 10 looks at the procedures for appointing experts , and in particular the role of professional bodies .
5 Chapter 4 looks at the development of Conservative health policy throughout the 1980s , after the 1982 structure was put in place and up to the publication of the 1989 White Paper Working for Patients .
6 Chapter 5 looks at the ideas of English and communications students about their discipline , and at their view of science .
7 Chapter 5 looks at the connection between a further duty , the duty to act for a proper purpose , and the commitment to profit maximisation .
8 Chapter 1 looked at the UK in an international context , but the changes that it examined have had major implications for the internal structure and organization of the economy .
9 Chapter 13 looks at the requirements of educators in using signed messages and argues that even in a teaching environment where English has to be reinforced the teacher requires access to both BSL and signed English .
10 Chapter 9 looks at the familiar problem of personality clashes .
11 Part III looked at a whole series of forces that locked the underclass into place .
12 Part Six looks at the machinery for resolving disputes .
13 Socata 's engineers first looked at the Mooney 301 left , concluding it could never match such performance .
14 We 're Group four looking at the er , the hotel complex which has been explained before hand .
15 ‘ They are both well respected members of the community and I have asked the Attorney General to look at the sentences . ’
16 The requirement against memory ‘ bundling ’ had been important when the EC first looked at the complaints back in 1977 ; but in the period 1977–84 memory prices dropped so steeply as to make the point relatively trivial .
17 Section 4.3 examines economists ' models of constraints and objectives as practised in state-owned firms , whereas section 4.4 looks at the controls imposed in the UK and provides some general remarks on comparisons between these and the economists ' suggestions .
18 This section concentrates on the second and third of these phases ; Section 5.2 looks at the first phase .
19 Section 5.3 looks at reasons why words were missed or inserted , and section 5.4 looks at the effect of substitutions .
20 Section 16.2 looks at the key institutions and their role in the UK financial system .
  Next page