Example sentences of "of [art] [noun] would [be] " in BNC.
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1 | Equally to , I consider that significant peripheral development of the villages would be harmful to their character as well . |
2 | Therefore , to grant pardons because of the harshness of the sentences would be no more rational than pardoning all those who , a century before , were executed for stealing goats or loaves of bread . |
3 | At the same time , the remaining members of the SBS would be landed by boat in the El Daba area to attack supply dumps and motor transport . |
4 | At this point , the trustees decided that the future of the church would be best secured by vesting it in the Redundant Churches Fund . |
5 | When that was done , the true purpose of the operation would be revealed and commissioners would demand the loan from each subject according to his wealth . |
6 | Were the passage to be literally transcribed , with the melody in octaves on the 1st violins and violas , the semiquaver figures in the right hand to the second violins and the arpeggios in the left hand to the cellos , the intentions of the composer would be most inadequately represented . |
7 | Part of the price of the packaging would be taken off the wages . |
8 | Then the story of the capture would be told , with Joseph as the hero . |
9 | First , where an application for an injunction is made ex parte and the defendant claims , or in the opinion of the court would be likely to claim , that he acted in contemplation or furtherance of a trade dispute , the court shall not grant the injunction unless satisfied that all steps which in the circumstances were reasonable have been taken with a view to securing that notice of the application and an opportunity of being heard with respect to the application have been given to him . |
10 | The role of the court would be to establish the limits to the spectrum of meanings that a term could bear ; the awesome visage of the Albert Hall would disappear . |
11 | The balance of the power of the court would be investigated . |
12 | joint local authority/private sector schemes — ownership and ultimate responsibility would lie within the public sector but the day-to-day running of the service would be contracted out to the private sector through competitive tendering . |
13 | Cardinal Nicola Canali , responsible for Vatican finances , enquired whether ‘ once again the preparation of the Council would be entrusted to the Holy Office ’ . |
14 | This meant that the preparation of the Council would be in the hands of the ‘ museum-keepers ’ of the Roman curia . |
15 | Conference , these statistics have been proved in one small area of the United Kingdom , the results if the same exercise was carried out across the length and breadth of the country would be frightening . |
16 | It was also agreed that sewage dumped in certain " sensitive " areas of the sea would be given secondary treatment . |
17 | Ellesmere Port and Neston leisure chief Philip Hearfield said yesterday the clearing of the park would be a top priority . |
18 | Some of the designer 's ideas about what would happen and what pupil and teacher activities might occur were : ( i ) children and teachers would be amused by the screen presentation ( ii ) that the screen might dominate the situation ( iii ) that teachers would possibly be engaged in a new activity ( iv ) it could be used across a range of teachers and children ( v ) children would be busy drawing graphs themselves ( vi ) discussion on the interpretation of the graphs would be instigated . |
19 | His European diplomacy had been a triumph ; he had sealed something very like a partnership with Mikhail Gorbachev ; he had reason to think that a deal on the Uruguay round of the GATT would be completed by Christmas . |
20 | And if , in special circumstances , compliance with a provision of the Schedules would be inconsistent with the requirement to give a true and fair view the directors must depart from that provision to the extent necessary , giving , in a note to the accounts , particulars of the departure and the reasons for , and effect of , it . |
21 | A great mound close to him , but the daily norm that was so precious to the administration of the camp would be found wanting that day . |
22 | The ecological monitoring group is a useful initiative to ensure that the environmental impacts of the spill would be assessed . |
23 | The gravitational field of the singularity would be so strong that light could not escape from the region around it but would be dragged back by the gravitational field . |
24 | In addition it was agreed , subject to bilateral talks with individual governments , that part of the debt would be re-channelled into local projects which would include environmental protection , aid and equity investments . |
25 | A detailed itinerary was not provided , but it was expected that the bulk of the meetings would be held in Washington . |
26 | In mainstream figural cinema , which foregrounds spectacle , the investment of psychic energy and hence positioning of the subject would be , not via ego and secondary process , but via primary process . |
27 | A better description of the Mafia would be as a network of criminal contacts regularly exploited by shifting alliances of ruthless drug-traffickers and extortionists , who flourish where politicians and policemen are venal or lazy . |
28 | In the case of intrenched meanders a cross-section of the valley would be more or less symmetrical wherever it was taken ( Fig. 9.11A ) . |
29 | Cator engaged to pay them £10,000 down against a bond for treble that amount , £30,000 , which the holder of the bond would be paid when ‘ a certain event ’ took place — the death of the king and the succession of any one of the three royal borrowers . |
30 | If inflation continued at the rate of 5% per annum , then by 1 January , 1992 each £100 original nominal value of the bond would be worth £110.25 and the interest due thereon in that year would be £2.205 . |