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

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1 The government are putting the defence of Britain at risk by this Treasury led approach .
2 The cyclic AMP content of the cell suspension rose to a peak one minute after the addition of histamine at 37°C and then fell .
3 D-arginine ( 5×10 - 4 M ) had no effect upon this inhibition but it was reversed by the addition of L-arginine at the same concentration ( fig 5 ) .
4 After 3 minutes pre-incubation at the appropriate temperature , the reaction was started by the addition of ATP at a final concentration of 2mM .
5 Another general observation worth making is that , whereas in the past the majority of students at British colleges were likely to be male ( except perhaps on specialized vocational courses such as fashion design , hairdressing or nursing ) , higher and further education in Britain now attracts almost equal numbers of men and women students .
6 In fact , the majority of attenders at day hospitals and day care centres are long-term service users .
7 ‘ My staff are more highly trained than the majority of officers at other prisons in this country .
8 After scooping the majority of prizes at the event the 24-man-troupe found themselves being booked for other carnivals which led to a whole summer 's bookings in 1990 .
9 I 'll bet you 'll find that the majority of shops at
10 And he has appointed Mr Gergen , a long-time Renaissance man who gave a fine speech on the fragmentation of America at this year 's Hilton Head weekend , to a key position .
11 We like the idea of stability of policy and time to work on the reduction of pollution at our own pace ’ . ’
12 The government 's 1991 budget proposal [ see p. 37178 ] envisaged an allocation of $295,000 million for defence , a 2.6 per cent decrease on the 1990 actual level in real terms , and envisaged the closure of 35 domestic and 13 overseas military bases as well as the reduction of forces at a further 200 bases .
13 ( Paragraph 32 : " Countries which desire to reduce their birth rates are invited to give particular consideration to the reduction of fertility at the extremes of female reproductive ages because of the salutary effects this may have on infant and maternal welfare . "
14 But her cause was badly damaged in 1985 , the day before she was to sit next to the Prince of Wales at a dinner in Florida , when it was revealed that she posed as a nude model in magazines and appeared in pornographic films in the late 1960s .
15 ‘ We set up the stand outside the Prince of Wales at ten to three on Saturday afternoons when the pub used to chuck them out , ’ he said .
16 On 1 July Prince Charles was invested the Prince of Wales at Caernarfon Castle and I bought a large Welsh flag to cheer the many Welsh , or half-Welsh , teachers in the school .
17 Another son , Arthur Wilson ( 1836–1909 , q.v. ) , master of the Holderness Hunt , frequently entertained the prince of Wales at his home , Tranby Croft , scene of the baccarat scandal in 1890 .
18 The award was in respect of an exhibition entitled ‘ Wealth of a Nation ’ mounted by the royal Scottish Museum , the award being presented by His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales at a special ceremony in Edinburgh .
19 The award was presented by the Prince of Wales at the Annual Meeting of the per cent club , which I 've already mentioned , and it was during nineteen ninety , and it won the private sector small to medium size company , or companies subsidiary sector category .
20 erm , you have , I have n't , and erm , there was a photograph that I cut out of the paper sometime before he abdicated , over the Prince of Wales at the races with Mrs Simpson .
21 Because of the variety of possibilities at each move , the ability to predict who will win from a given move becomes less and less reliable , the longer the game has to run after that move .
22 The expanding national collection of case studies highlights the variety of outcomes at all levels and in particular features examples of placements for industrialists in education organised as part of the service .
23 They continued to feed , or stared out on the Zoo not looking in the direction of Minch at all ; while Creggan was so busy staring at Minch in delight and pleasure that he did not notice behind him , in the next-door cage , Slorne stare for the moment at Minch and then swing round and silently resume her vigil at the back top of her cage , looking at the trees and sky .
24 We operated from fixed points with the vessels motoring or drifting as near to the centre of the basin as possible between Foyers and Urquhart Bay , normally scanning the beam over a sector of 120 o in the direction of travel at a tilt of 30 o to 40 o , to give an effective search to a depth of 160 m .
25 The north-south winds vary in direction with altitude , though the zonal winds are in the direction of rotation at all altitudes .
26 From 1862 , Wolverton lost its independence as a locomotive works and came under the direction of Ramsbottom at Crewe .
27 ‘ Although we started with cleaning services , we 're now extending the voucher system to other personal care areas , like bathing , more intensive care services and especially to the provision of services at night , possibly using independent agencies .
28 However , it is also clear that such projections can only inform policymaking rather than dictate it and there remains a need for clear national guidelines on the provision of places at all levels of education .
29 Perhaps their most important contribution for Sussex birds in recent years has been the vast increase in the provision of food at bird-tables and feeding stations .
30 Instances are the lending of constables on the occasion of large gatherings in and outside private premises , as on the occasions of weddings , athletic or boxing contests or race meetings , and the provision of constables at large railway stations .
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