Example sentences of "to [art] [adj] [noun pl] of " in BNC.

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1 It looks towards a statutory requirement that representatives of trade unions should be appointed , in that capacity , to the directing boards of companies .
2 Paul Johnson 's production is a masterwork of clarity and while it does n't quite haul itself up to the avant-garde peaks of Celtic Frost , it hammers off at enough tangents to cover almost all the bases .
3 Paul Johnson 's production is a masterwork of clarity and while it does n't quite haul itself up to the avant-garde peaks of Celtic Frost , it hammers off at enough tangents to cover almost all the bases .
4 The coalition facilitated a realignment from the two-party Liberal-Unionist contest in 1914 to the Labour-Conservative battles of the late 1920s ; only with the triumph of coalition in 1916 did the old politics die , and only with the destruction of coalitionism in 1924 could the new politics be born .
5 In other words , most translators prefer to give priority to the syntactic principles of the target language rather than to the communicative structure of the source text .
6 Let us apply this account to the syntactic structures of a natural language undergoing the process of evolution which it is only reasonable to suppose has taken place .
7 These words can be re-grouped according to the syntactic categories of noun , verb , adjective and adverb .
8 Whilst paying lip service to the sporting values of the public schools , suburban man was busy with less physically and morally taxing forms of exercise .
9 One of the factors contributing to the disciplinary problems of young people is their inability to cope with conflicts involving authority figures — those interpersonal occasions in which the youth and an authority figure ( such as a parent or teacher ) have opposing desires .
10 It has been suggested that Methodism generally produced an attitude of mind and sense of resignation as well as the habits of order and " industry " which combined to reinforce in the proletariat the necessary submission to the disciplinary imperatives of industrial capitalism .
11 Those that still persist in the belief that the use of computers in the study of history equates solely to quantification are about as out of date as the dinosaur-like machines available to the computer-using pioneers of the 1970s .
12 Pairwise comparisons of NP1450L and EP1242L with the largest and second largest subunits of Saccharomyces cerevisiae RNA polymerases I , II and III , respectively , show that the ASFV subunits are more similar to the equivalent subunits of RNA polymerase II than to those of RNA polymerases I and III ( not shown ) .
13 There is evidence of sensitivity to the issues at local planning level and empirical evidence as to the differential needs of four year olds in primary schools ( NFER/SCDC 1987 ) , so the government is in no doubt about the seriousness of a situation which will be aggravated by the advent of the Education Reform Act .
14 It is , perhaps not surprising that Renaissance writers seem most open to the deconstructive implications of the play of language in lyric poetry , generic forms which suggest more personal and private preoccupations .
15 The presbytery appoints the church officers of the respective parishes to make inquiry for her and to summond her to the succeeding dyets of the presbytery to be held in the isle .
16 The presbytery appoints the church officers of the respective parishes to make inquiry for her and to summond her to the succeeding dyets of the presbytery to be held in the isle .
17 By the middle and later 1960s , however , this ‘ Cisalpine ’ theological agenda was being overtaken by a more evidently twentieth-century one : modern biblical scholarship turned out not to have stopped with Westcott and Lightfoot nor even with Dodd , but seemed much more a matter of swallowing Bultmann and Nineham ; ecumenical theology now led one less to Luther and Calvin or even Barth than to the vapid profundities of Tillich , Bishop Robinson 's Honest to God and beyond .
18 I too will treat this group of writers as ‘ structuralists ’ and look at some aspects of their work to show how it has created an object for analysis that is relevant to the empirical tasks of the sociology of knowledge .
19 The hypotheses , formed after his observations , are many ; but most of them are related to the empirical findings of a long tradition and the world is spared a too individualistic interpretation of some of Nature 's more self-willed manifestations .
20 Here was a sectional interest dictating to the democratically-elected representatives of the people , and since it had proved impossible belatedly to accommodate that sectional interest through the mechanism of ‘ tripartism ’ , it had to be challenged .
21 The casual labour problem was too sizeable to be solved by these means and it was unsuited to the temporary needs of unemployed skilled men .
22 It is to the connected questions of developing and making available our unpublished collections , and dealing with the problem of what constitutes a published source , that I propose to devote most of this paper .
23 In contrast to the eerie splendours of Althorp , Diana 's rambling ten-bedroomed home , Park House , was positively cosy notwithstanding the staff cottages , extensive garages , outdoor swimming pool , tennis court and cricket pitch in the grounds as well as the six full-time staff who included a cook , a butler and a private governess .
24 that they are meant to demonstrate a new correlation of forces in the Nordic region , the obsolescence of traditional policies and the dangers to the Nordic states of clinging to them : in short , to distance Norway from her NATO allies and produce a pattern of Swedish alignment more attuned to Soviet requirements .
25 He reacted by behaving in a way which rammed home to the Scots memories of Edward I. The events of 1543 took on a sinister familiarity ; for Edward 's attempted annexation of Scotland had also begun with a proposed marriage , between the infant Margaret , Maid of Norway , who succeeded Alexander III in 1286 , and Edward 's son , the future Edward II .
26 We see the allocation of the scarce resource of our last terrestrial channel as a matter worth serious discussion , and seek in it an answer to the perceived shortcomings of the existing Channels .
27 They argue that , for Whitehouse in particular , though after the war her formal ties with the Oxford Group diminished , her years of close association with it provided her with a very clear intellectual approach to the perceived ills of the modern world .
28 The longer they have been Christians and the more they have been preoccupied with their Christian activities , the more difficult it becomes to relate their beliefs to the perceived needs of their friends .
29 With regard to the perceived needs of the post-1992 Europe , free movement of labour and equality of opportunity are much talked about concepts .
30 The University will be responding to the perceived needs of students , employers and society generally .
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