Example sentences of "in [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Without so much as a backward glance she left the room , indignation clear in the rigidity of her spine as his mocking laugh rang out behind her .
2 He had the same aura of privacy that a person at prayer has , the same do-not-touch-me signal of adults that the children recognised , it was in the rigidity of the crouching figure , in the way he stared at the stream without seeing it .
3 But it is true that , with some 70% of outstanding shares on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in the vaults of friendly business partners , Japanese firms are under little pressure to increase dividends and their managements have few fears of being replaced in a sudden stockmarket coup .
4 It is not love if it is locked up in the vaults of our dreams for a better world and a happier life .
5 Files concerning his case and the unwillingness of the neutral Irish government to make representations are buried in the vaults of the Irish Foreign Office while Joyce scholars patiently await publication under new public record arrangements .
6 For deep in the vaults of Protestant Kirks there are no altars to the dead and no prayers to them or for them .
7 However , a detailed examination in the early 1980s of nearly 1,000 coffins of the period 1730–1860 in the vaults of Christchurch , Spitalfields , revealed a wealth of information previously unrecorded .
8 In the vaults of this pleasant Late Gothic Episcopal Church ( 1818 ) is buried Sir Henry Raeburn , the famous Scots portrait painter .
9 The Vaults , at ( ) , in the vaults of an old chapel , has a 60-plus strong wine list .
10 In the vaults of the chapel of the Palace of San Severo .
11 How about a restaurant set in the vaults of a medieval monastery , lit by candles and with a menu that owes its variety to the best raw material found around the world ?
12 They were certainly not affixed to the merchandise as labels in the same way that some furniture makers and picture framers did , as a recent examination of some one thousand coffins in the vaults at Christchurch , Spitalfields , has proved .
13 A very fine light green velvet — almost eau-de-Nil — was seen on a child 's coffin in the vaults at St Paul 's , Shadwell , and made all the more attractive with its gilt furniture .
14 ‘ His moveables are kept in the vaults below the hall here .
15 A number of cases of this type were noticed at Christchurch , Spitalfields , and St Marylebone parish church as well as in the vaults beneath St Paul 's , Shadwell , and St John 's , Wapping .
16 He had parked outside the hotel , and in the patchwork of light and shade she saw his half-smile .
17 Scottish resentment can be seen in the half-heartedness of the act of 1555 concerning the spreading of seditious slanders .
18 Explosive energies in the kiloton to megaton range are possible .
19 Loyalty to crown and ‘ country ’ sometimes exceeded in the colonies that in the core of the Empire itself , especially among the poor and the powerless .
20 Preparation of the food ‘ on shore ’ now offered private contractors a foothold in the core of the business , and this in turn led in 1987 to the highly symbolic step of privatising the railway sandwich .
21 ‘ Pull yourself together ! ’ she shouted at herself , mentally , like a true public schoolgirl ( one 's education never leaves one : even the religion stays stubbornly in the core of one 's being ) .
22 In the innermost pit , if the work of the scientists in the H area had been successful , it would be assumed that a nuclear explosion would generate a heat in the core of tritium/deuterium of one hundred million degrees Centigrade .
23 Distance was counted in new language , because it was necessary to be able to refer to the diameter of a unit as small as that of the electron that orbits the neutron in the core of the atom .
24 Unusual clustering of carboxyl side chains in the core of iron-free ribonucleotide reductase
25 Right , because the body is acting in order to protect its vital organs and it 's drawing the blood vessels near the skin , shut down , you 're not needed there , you 're needed here , in the core of the body , because your blood is what warms your skin up , it 's taken away from the skin , then the skin feels cold and clammy , yeah , clammy because of course if there 's no heat , we sweat all the time and especially if somebody 's had an accident or is seriously ill they will be sweating , yes , then there 's nothing to dry the sweat off okay , what happens when we sweat excessively in the summer time ?
26 Okay , you want the body temperature kept at an even level , do n't have it too high , do n't have it too low , cos if you shiver you make use of muscles and then the muscles will call on oxygen and then you 'll shiver , you do n't want them there you want the blood in here , if you make them sweat you 'll bring the blood to the surface of the skin again to lose heat , and that 's again precisely where you do n't need , you want it in the core of the body so you maintain an even body temperature .
27 My view , which locates racism in the core of politics , contrasts sharply with what can be called the coat-of-paint theory of racism ( Gilroy , 1987 ) .
28 But somewhere hiding in the core of you , is there not a little worm of insecurity ?
29 Attempting to execute a difficult move , paralysed in the core of his muscles by nervousness , Lucien lost his footing and ruined the sequence .
30 If we are outside , we shall not enjoy the advantages of a single currency or have the investment in this country of those companies — our own and overseas firms — which want to invest in the core of Europe and enjoy full access to all that goes on in Europe .
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