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

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1 The relative isolation of women from the public world of their husbands does not just have an impact on their access to relatives and friends but also , not surprisingly , on their use of leisure facilities outside the home ( see also chapter 10 , section 10.3 ) .
2 Surely it is an association of women with a shared experience who enjoy meeting each other .
3 The International Association of Women in the Arts is also planning a series of events in Madrid in September , as well as its AGM and conference which will take place from the 28 September to the 2 October .
4 Yes do we have much idea of men 's perception of women in the play .
5 If we define feminism as the consciousness of women regarding the fact that they are subjugated , exploited etc .
6 But beyond the incorporation of women in the revolutionary organizations and the fight against machismo , we will have to wait until we can implement structural changes in the economic and social system .
7 According to the Middle East Times of March 10-16 some Saudi women were disappointed to find no mention of women in the legislation .
8 I have cheated a bit by not mentioning them until now , but the first mention of women by the union does not actually occur until late January and early February , that is when the strike was already entering its final phase .
9 Indeed , Frank Field claims that the Child Poverty Action Group , which since its foundation in 1965 has consistently and somewhat single-mindedly campaigned for the extension of and increases in family allowance , was positively hindered by the latent opposition of women to the scheme ( Field , 1982 ) .
10 Restrictions on women within paid employment are further evidenced by the extreme concentration of women within a very narrow range of occupational groups .
11 Among women working full-time in the better paid jobs , there is a concentration of women in the lower grades of their particular type of employment .
12 This book is courageous in exposing the violation of women at the hands of medical and scientific practitioners , in placing this medical malpractice n social and feminist contexts , and in showing that all women will be effected by reproductive technology if it is allowed to go on .
13 That is to say , the majority of those who had domestic power in Libya were inclined to see the emancipation of women as a threat to their interests .
14 The entrance of women into the manufacturing workforce , particularly into its most modern sectors , is clearly having important consequences in many Third World countries ( see Tiano , 1988 ) .
15 Leapor and Pope see the general condition of women as a series of contradictions .
16 The question and practice of the admission of women to the ministerial priesthood in some provinces of the Anglican communion prevents reconciliation even where there is otherwise progress towards agreement in faith of the meaning of the eucharist and the ordained ministry . ’
17 The Catholic Church 's position , which is based on its experience of the constant tradition of faith since the time of the apostles , is that ‘ the Church , in fidelity to the example of the Lord , does not consider herself authorised to admit women to priestly ordination ’ ( Introduction , declaration on the question of the admission of women to the ministerial priesthood , CDF 15 October 1976 ) .
18 The Sex Disqualification ( Removal ) Act 1919 , designed to facilitate the admission of women to the House of Commons but worded in such a way as to be apt to give them access also to the House of Lords was seized upon by Viscountess Rhondda as having this effect but the Committee of Privileges refused to endorse her claim and the House rejected it .
19 Forced to resign the secretaryship of the AEW when the Somerville council challenged her control of tuition arrangements , she became , with her husband , an influential opponent in 1895–6 of a bid to secure the admission of women to the Oxford BA .
20 He was also committed to and involved in the admission of women to the medical school , which obviously involved much tact and understanding in order to break down prejudices .
21 Secondly , and perhaps even more significantly , the studies have demonstrated the basic invisibility of women in a large proportion of published material .
22 But the invisibility of women in the sociology of deviance is not simply a mirror of reality .
23 The invisibility of women in the sociology of work is guaranteed by the choice of predominantly masculine jobs in research design .
24 Women are bracketed with minors and the code is basically concerned with the protection of women as the " weaker sex " .
25 The gynaecological department at Middlesbrough is now the leading unit in Britain , treating a variety of women with the latest technology and minimum surgery .
26 She was involved in the London Women 's Film Group and the setting up of Cinema of Women in the late seventies ; then there was a sense of a political project , opportunities for women to meet and discuss ideas and motivations .
27 ‘ We may thus think of the subordination of women as the result of three different kinds of victimisation. 1 .
28 Furthermore one may argue that the subordination of women in the church reflected the cultural conditioning of people in the first century .
29 The shroud thrown over the subordination of women in the mining communities has much to tell us about the myth of the " archetypical proletarians ' .
30 Judith Ochshorn , a specialist in Near Eastern culture , points out that there is a long history of women as mourners and attendants on the dead : thus ‘ in its cultural context , the presence of women at the cross or at the tomb of Jesus was not exceptional ’ .
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