Example sentences of "to do with [art] [noun] in " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ What you going to do with a degree in history ? ’ his mother asked him when he graduated with a first . |
2 | After the war , when Helmut had something to do with a factory in Brazil , where he and Father had managed to set up a colony of displaced persons , Father supplied all the machine tools and worked closely with Helmut on the project . |
3 | He now clearly concedes that this , too , has everything to do with the man in the No 8 shirt . |
4 | ‘ There 's an art to tackling and it 's nothing to do with the elbows in faces , eye-poking , testicle-grabbing and raking opponents down their Achilles tendons that he talks about . |
5 | I 'm an old hand at Falcon Sailing — it 's thanks to them I know that a holding tank 's nothing to do with the Russians in Prague . |
6 | The second reason is a nagging doubt that perhaps we are researching fictions of our own making ; that is , we are producing theories about experimental subjects in laboratory situations which have nothing to do with the individual in society . |
7 | ‘ And I do n't see what that has to do with the problem in hand . ’ |
8 | Dr Sambataro felt very strongly about the decision to send troops to Russia ; he had a lot to do with the army in the course of his work . |
9 | ‘ . All quite true of course , but it has little or nothing to do with the passage in question , whoch focuses very markedly not on Aeneas but on his father Anchises : |
10 | The justification for using a hierarchy is mathematical , and has to do with the way in which the total variability of a collection is successively reduced as one passes from higher to lower levels in the hierarchy . |
11 | After reading this you will not be an expert on fusion science , but you will realise that fusions fluctuating fortunes have had a lot to do with the way in which the science and technology developed . |
12 | The secret of whetting an audience 's appetite for music of the long-distant past has much to do with the way in which it is presented . |
13 | The second point that could cause confusion on the printouts is to do with the way in which stitches are to be cast on or off , increased or decreased and so on . |
14 | One set of issues has to do with the way in which science and technology so drastically alter previous patterns of life that they erode and undermine the social , ethical and spiritual values which had been encapsulated and preserved in them . |
15 | This has to do with the way in which network membership involves possession of the social skills and reciprocal relationships which that membership entails . |
16 | Another reason for expecting fundholders ' referral rates to fall after April 1991 had to do with the way in which their budgets were set . |
17 | The success of the cold war formula had everything to do with the way in which , at least in the West , it commanded a broad bipartisan political consensus and incorporated the dominant parties of the Left . |
18 | Third , the injustices against which prisoners struggle are not merely to do with the way in which we run our prisons . |
19 | It is not for me to help Scottish Tories in those circumstances , but I suggest to them that it may have something to do with the way in which the Government treat Scotland in legislative terms . |
20 | The point we want to make for immediate purposes has to do with the way in which methodological problems arise from particular conceptions of the " order of things " . |
21 | I mean is n't it really using a computer is merely a facilitator , like using a car is a simple way of transport , and therefore whether or not it facilitates is nothing to do with the system itself , it 's to do with the way in which it 's used . |
22 | It 's to do with the Indians in a funny sort of way . |
23 | As with the prohibition to do with the tree in the midst of the Garden , God gives no explanation . |
24 | He was quick , she noticed , to take her up on any casual remark and supposed that his interest in other people 's affairs and their reactions had something to do with the novelist in him . |
25 | How far all this was homesickness or a defensive strategy against ( anticipated ? ) rejection by the surrounding community , or just sheer stubbornness , I now ca n't tell , but I knew even then that it had nothing to do with the world in which I was trying to live . |
26 | Much has to do with the context in which the data is interpreted . |
27 | Rules are arbitrary in character and are to do with the manner in which people choose between alternative modes of conduct . |
28 | The respect afforded him in England had partly to do with the manner in which he had taken on the mantle of English culture ; in the absence of any figure with equivalent influence , he was eventually to be invested with an almost shamanistic authority . |
29 | While psychoanalysis itself probably had little to do with the decline in accepted religious belief , its early popularizes only benefited from it . |
30 | You know , probably , that Malduin would n't have anything to do with the fortifications in Fife and the Lothians , and would only release his land-workers when under a direct order from my lord your husband . ’ |