Example sentences of "of a [noun] give [art] " in BNC.

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1 One possibility being envisaged is the creation of a document giving a detailed description of a sculpture which would accompany the work whenever it was sold .
2 Work carried out in the area of ergonomics takes account of the fact that most drivers only have a few tenths of a second to give an order or read information .
3 Accordingly , makers and dealers in ‘ bootleg ’ recordings did not commit this tort even though their activities very seriously affected the value of a contract giving a recording company the exclusive right to exploit live performances .
4 Every repetition of a libel gives a fresh cause of action against the persons responsible for the repetition .
5 On its own the IRR of a project gives no information about either a project 's present value or the effect of its acceptance on the value of the firm .
6 She has sold extensively through him over the years , and the appearance of her pictures at this ambitious Italian gallery is not a sign of a rift between the two , but of a desire to give the works wider exposure to the market .
7 The distinction is important because breach of a condition gives the other party the right to repudiate the contract and claim damages .
8 An oil dispensing massage head dispenses oil at the touch of a button to give a smooth , drag free massage .
9 The secretion of a skeleton gave the corals a great advantage over many other coelenterates ; supported thus they could overcome the lack of rigidity of their soft tissues and grow large .
10 Another kind of insight to be added to this model can be gained from other people 's responses to the same , or similar places Dame Laura Knight RA , in her autobiography The Magic of a Line gives an insight into how the Malverns were seen in the 1930s .
11 In one of those asides , Johnson with the eye of a painter gives the last glimpse of these high ways in 1773 : ‘ Once we saw a corn field , in which a lady was walking with some gentlemen … ’
12 He could see Prussian soldiers running away in the undergrowth and he felt the fierce exultation of a cavalryman given a helpless enemy to slaughter , but he did not see the batter of guns concealed in the deep shadows at the edge of the wood , nor the Prussian artillery officer who shouted , ‘ Fire ! ’
13 It is frequently argued that having personal experience of an event gives a dimension of knowledge that others can not fully share .
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