Example sentences of "[unc] [noun] of [noun sg] [art] " in BNC.

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1 I see , so coming back to er making the pills and silver on it and gold , was this er sort of foe the aristocracy more ?
2 Among the children >=12; months of age a respiratory rate >=70/min; had a specificity of 90% , a sensitivity of only 32% , and an accuracy of 61% , but a rate of >=60/min; had an accuracy of 70% .
3 The smaller one 's units of analysis the more of them are needed to cover the spectrum of interest .
4 Obviously I strongly believe that industry has to be modernised — none of us is against that — but during the Government 's term of office the restructuring in many of our industries has been far too savage .
5 but at the same time I would want to afford er , you as heads of departments er er everybody 's heads of department a little bit of leeway what i what if , what wa wa we have to be careful about this that we set a standard but allow a little leeway because all departments are slightly different and want to approach things
6 Is the Minister aware that Sheffield is plunging into its deepest recession since the war , that according to new research by the city council 's department of employment the true figure for unemployment is 17 per cent .
7 From the finance company 's point of view a contract of guarantee is the less satisfactory , for two reasons .
8 But from the firm 's point of view the local sales of a subsidiary are as much foreign sales as any export is .
9 From the learner 's point of view the most valuable part of this book consists of the 49 problems and answers .
10 But if the bad effects are on the body , and the good effects are on the gene alone , from the body 's point of view the net effect is all bad . )
11 From society 's point of view the only question is whether those who had the benefit of these excellent libraries in the forces will have the same access to books when they leave .
12 From mankind 's point of view the varying configurations of these 329 million cubic miles present a variety of conveniences and opportunities .
13 From the profoundly deaf child 's point of view the non-verbal is part of BSL , so the last two ‘ channels ’ are the same , and since the child does not hear effectively , the oral/aural ‘ channel ’ is also primarily visual .
14 From the client 's point of view the assessment provides an opportunity to express their difficulties in a structured manner , and make links between specific problems and various areas of their life , both past and present .
15 From the patient 's point of view the medical profession still appears divided about the main causes of heart attacks ; there is the stress lobby , the cigarette lobby and the exercise lobby .
16 From Giddens 's point of view the middle class should also include lower level white-collar workers ( for further details see p. 80 ) .
17 From the trader 's point of view the position is straightforward .
18 But from the pope 's point of view the boundaries of his influence had been extended by the coronation of Johannitsa and the influence of the patriarch of Constantinople and the Greek Church decreased .
19 From Waddo 's point of view the king 's death was a disaster ; too far from court to be involved in safeguarding Chilperic 's heir , which was arranged by Fredegund , he was liable to be excluded from the ruling group in the early years of Chlothar II .
20 Whereas from Britain 's point of view the London exchanges decided nothing , from the tsar 's point of view they cleared the decks for international action .
21 Equally , from the tenant 's point of view the interest granted him under a tenancy at will is so precarious that he would almost always be better off with a fixed term to which the 1954 Act did not apply .
22 I think from the video 's point of view the S I hardly ever use it anymore
23 Had she not heard Sarah 's cry of outrage the moment before she opened the carriage door and caught John in that position ?
24 MRS CEAUSESCU 'S ORGANISATION OF LOVE THE TRON , GLASGOW
25 A child 's game of hunt the thimble does n't feel creative .
26 For the purpose of the Working Party 's terms of reference the term is taken to include ‘ unit-load ’ warehousing structures where the access equipment is designed to lift to heights in excess of 10 metres .
27 And these questions pursued her , buzzing like mosquitoes , as she walked up Marylebone High Street with her briefcase , as she crossed the Edgware Road , as she joined the conference group for sherry in the Westminster Suite , as she discovered that Edgar had rightly warned her that conversing with Japanese was not easy , as she ate her indifferent luncheon of Maryland chicken , as she listened to Professor Yamamoto speak on Spenser 's reinterpretation of Freud 's interpretation of folie à deux in the classic case of Orphan Eva and her mother , as she delivered her own paper , as she attempted desperately to follow the ensuing discussion , of which she could grasp only one word in ten : all through this crazy jumble of non-language and misunderstanding , of erudition and impenetrable obscurity , of meaningless signs and uninterpretable eye contact , the mosquitoes buzzed and nipped and drew blood .
28 The Colonel had swiftly appreciated that if he needed to describe Dr Tariq 's sense of humour the backside of a blackcurrant was all he needed , and to spare .
29 There had also been recent newspaper reports of Bugis prahus putting into the atolls east of Celebes , burning the villages to the ground , and making off with the whole year 's harvest of copra the oil-bearing coconut husks — which was the inhabitants ' sole source of income .
30 Thackeray called the exhibits on show-mostly machines " England 's arms of conquest the trophies of her bloodless war " , and visitors flocked to London from all over the world to marvel at them .
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