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

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1 The peculiar phosphorescent glow was the result of the atmosphere around the ship being highly-charged with static electricity , generated by the rush of the steam through the volcanic vent , and the friction between the myriads of fragmentary particles that were blasted up with it .
2 Most remarkable of all , Karl , Barth , having been unable to serve as an observer , later published his reflections ( 1967 , 1969 ) , asking himself such questions as ‘ How would things look if Rome ( without ceasing to be Rome ) were one day simply to overtake us and place us in the shadows , so far as the renewing of the church through the Word and Spirit of the gospel is concerned ? ’
3 They are continuing factors in the life of the Church through the experience Christians have of the Spirit , and through the sacraments of water ( baptism ) and blood ( the eucharist ) which seem to be alluded to here .
4 He uses this church as an example because it is very easy to see the faults of the church through the irony of the poem .
5 A founder in 1913 of the Anglo-Hellenic League , he wrote numerous articles supporting Greek territorial claims and upholding Venizelos in his feud with King Constantine I. With R. W. Seton-Watson [ q.v. ] , a colleague at King 's , Burrows formulated in the autumn of 1915 the unsuccessful scheme , which was taken up by the Foreign Office , to lure Greece into the war of 1914–18 on the side of the entente through the offer of Cyprus .
6 Maggie scrounged what food she could , and when Sarah dipped a crust of bread in the cabbage soup she 'd made she could see the cracks in the bottom of the dish through the thin liquid .
7 In both the Reports of the Court to the General Assembly and the listings of the United Nations Secretariat , Nicaragua was included as having accepted the compulsory jurisdiction of the Court through the operation of Article 36 ( 5 ) on its acceptance of the compulsory jurisdiction of the Permanent Court .
8 This situation was hardly conducive to the unification of the country through the medium of the press .
9 Once the state has provided internal and external order , it begins to expand its functions outside the defining field into ‘ resource mobilisation ’ — creating the right conditions for the economic prosperity of the country through the development of roads and communications .
10 The small round window looked down over Knockglen , along the tree-lined drive of the convent through the big gates and down the broad main street of the town .
11 Was it the faint smell of herbs and newly baked dough , the soft ticking of the wall-mounted clock which seemed both to mark the passing seconds and yet to hold time in thrall , the rhythmic moaning of the sea through the half-open door , the sense of well-fed ease conveyed by the two cushioned armchairs , the open hearth ?
12 Chambers had made no secret of his intention to treat the human race as the last and highest product of the ascent through the animal hierarchy .
13 Pat Thurston , of Kew Rise , Darlington , received a copy of the document through the post .
14 Dove , the early American Modernist , met everyone worth meeting in Paris at the beginning of the century through the ministrations of his good friend Alfred Maurer and then returned to New York where , during the 1920s , he lived on a houseboat moored on the Harlem River .
15 Hampstead Heath , the fields of Battersea and Islington , and banks of the river through the villages of Chelsea , Wandsworth , Hammersmith and Putney provided rich hunting grounds for plant collectors and daily expeditions could be made from the City .
16 Yet it is probably fair to suggest that few people could have been immune from the implications of the party struggle at Westminster , since decisions taken by the central government often had a direct affect on ordinary people 's lives , and few people could have avoided being exposed to the political controversies of the day through the various media of propaganda .
17 The London Passenger Transport Board was put under the direct control of the Government through the Railway Executive Committee .
18 And yet , alighting in the sunshine from the trembling train I found myself in a space transfigured by the three stages of the passage through the underworld that is matinee cinema : the transition from day to night ; the day for night of the viewing ; the transition back to daylight .
19 By any standards , fish are a ‘ live quarry ’ who fight in terror against the pull of the hook through the side of their mouths .
20 On the second run of the film through the camera or optical printer , the already exposed part is covered and the previously unexposed portion is now exposed to create a composite image consisting of two , or more , previously separate elements .
21 Most police forces have produced a pro-forma to lead the officer in charge of the case through the procedure .
22 In the light of the foregoing material and pending the conclusion of the investigation that has been undertaken at the request of the Chief Executive , the board resolved that , in the interests of investors , Norwich Union should for the time being and with immediate effect be prohibited from : ( 1 ) accepting any new investment business from the Winchester Group or any company representative of the Winchester Group and in particular entering into any investment contract with any investor introduced by the Winchester Group or any such company representative ; and ( 2 ) soliciting investment business from members of the public through the Winchester Group or any of its company representatives .
23 The passage of the European through the Indian station , his dependence on servants , and the quantity of baggage carried were all well described by Sir Sidney Low , writing in 1911 .
24 However , controls on price would normally be needed , assuming replacement of the incumbent through the market mechanism by a producer of superior efficiency is difficult , that is , the market is not contestable ( see section 2.3 ) .
25 This arrangement has helped to reduce the potential oppressiveness of the resulting internal corridor because the northern ‘ strip ’ of service rooms also accommodates the two staircases that serve the two publicly accessible upper floors of the building and natural light spills into the ends of the corridor through the glazed enclosures of these features , reducing the room 's apparent length .
26 Lord Young , the deputy chairman of the Conservative Party , who piloted much of the bill through the Lords when he was Trade and Industry Secretary , said : ‘ This amendment is only a mischievous attempt to gain party political advantage . ’
27 Neither was there all that much political interest behind it if the minimal debate during the passage of the Bill through the House was anything to go by ( Cherry , 1974 ) .
28 It was anticipated that the anti-prohibitionist lobby would campaign hard to prevent the passage of the bill through the Chamber of Deputies .
29 However , when the regulations came to be made , the government maintained that the policy which had been set out during the passage of the Bill through the House was unworkable .
30 This is an alteration of the crystalline structure of the stone through the through the action of acid leaching of magnesium from the calcium magnesium carbonate .
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