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

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1 In the first place , the Christian 's view of the Old Testament must be Christ 's view of it .
2 In his book Gotcha ! — The Media , The Government And The Falklands Crisis , Robert Harris noted the dismay of Ministry of Defence officials at the readiness of British tv to report the enemy 's view of the war , even using Argentine footage .
3 And the electorate 's view of the Conservative Party would depend upon its success in creating a Defence policy that was perceived to give reasonable security at lower cost .
4 The ‘ rule of thirds ’ has been treated as the standard method of division , but other arrangements were sometimes made which might reflect the contractor 's view of the likely profits to be won from a particular campaign .
5 However , there will also be in some cases the judge 's view of the relative culpability of the prisoner and co-defendants .
6 This made a difference to the boy 's view of the situation .
7 The portable screens are designed to fit round the witness box when needed to block the child 's view of the defendant but allow them to see magistrates and lawyers in the case .
8 In a classroom it can give you the students ' view of the teacher , it can give you the teacher 's view of the students or it can be an observer which sits at the side of the class and looks from one to the other .
9 The limited nature of the Court 's view of the employee 's option needs to be understood .
10 All the people that he painted that Ehrenburg knew resembled their portraits : ‘ What is extraordinary is that Modigliani 's portraits resemble each other ; it is not a matter of an assumed style or some superficial trick of painting , but of the artist 's view of the world …
11 The Cabinet is set to approve the white paper setting out the Government 's view of the long-term future for coal and other energy resources this morning .
12 In any case , all of these uses evoke the speaker 's view of the possibility of someone being so audacious as to perform the event denoted by the infinitive , and all imply a negative prejudice against such a thing being possible .
13 The rate of interest at which this assistance is provided indicates the Bank 's view of the appropriate level of interest rates .
14 Interest is payed to the bank on the difference at a rate which reflects the bank 's view of the soundness of the company and the prevailing rates in the money market ; these rates will vary from time to time .
15 Interest is payed to the bank on the difference at a rate which reflects the bank 's view of the soundness of the company and the prevailing rates in the money market ; these rates will vary from time to time .
16 The paper 's usual film reporter would write the story from Miranda 's notes ; he 'd already attended several days ' shooting of the new , as yet untitled film , the first Meursault to be made in Britain , which was a supreme sign that the decade was making all the difference to the world 's view of the country , and its relation to the avant-garde .
17 The counsellor 's task is to attempt to enter and share the personal world of the patient non-judgmentally , and understand the patient 's view of the world at that particular time .
18 Above all it is important for the staff planning groups to decide what ‘ interdisciplinary ’ work or topic work will actually mean for the learner in practice , and choice will depend in part on the school 's view of the ‘ whole picture ’ spread across quite long periods of time , with the teachers planning carefully how they intend to create a balanced curriculum over weeks and months .
19 The school 's view of the child , in which concepts such as sociological views ( EPA areas ) , psychological views ( schools for maladjusted ) , intellectual views ( grammar schools ) and finally the new hybrid , the technological ( CTCs ) , may affect the education a child receives .
20 These constructs constrain the individual 's view of the world , and whereas everyone is potentially able to make their own choices and decisions , they are restricted by the knowledge that to do so has an impact on other members of their family .
21 Despite the above , the market 's view of the company remains positive : ‘ the high 5.5% dividend yield , continued commitment by top management to global leadership and … a solid backlog of consignments for 1993 ’ are all cited as reasons for inspiring confidence on the New York stock market .
22 It is pointless developing a mechanism that will always have one of its pivot points within a declared free work area or restricting the operator 's view of the work in progress .
23 A child 's view of the older generation is clearly very partial .
24 Nevertheless to consider the National Curriculum as a list of subjects runs the danger of expressing it in a way which over-emphasises information and a narrow range of skills at the expense of the development of a full range of socially useful skills , attitudes and ideas , which is usually the concern of interested parents and can even be seen in a child 's view of the purpose of education .
25 New evidence from the Middle East suggests that it may not be so simply explained , while a recently published account of a biologist 's view of the myths embedded in Genesis lends some colourful support to a broadening of outlook .
26 A cartoonist 's view of the future
27 Natural science is happy to take a spectator 's view of the workings of nature , and any retreat , as in quantum theory in physics or for the philosophical reasons in the last chapter , is reluctant .
28 An industrialist 's view of the polytechnics , and incidentally of the CNAA , was offered in 1970 by Sir Arthur Norman , President of the Confederation of British Industries .
29 The design of eye is not the only feature which determines an animal 's view of the world .
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