Example sentences of "and the [noun sg] these " in BNC.

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1 This was really vulgar , outdoing even the Bolshoi , and just as there is a difference between melodrama and drama , so there is an equal chasm between what Petipa originally intended and the way these two dancers vulgarised and exaggerated every step .
2 This chapter examines the broader economic circumstances of non-institutionalized elderly people , and the way these have changed over the last eighty years , to see how far and in what areas they may challenge the assertions of the ‘ structured dependency ’ school of authors .
3 This embraces all aspects of the educational task and the way these are accepted and fulfilled .
4 And the way these two go through shoes is terrible .
5 I remember being struck at once by his gaiety and warmth , and the way these two characteristics gave a face that was not exactly good-looking , in fact had an element of the grotesque in its narrow axe-like boniness under the untidy mop of black hair — a face seen in an elongating fun-fair mirror — an aspect of compelling charm , almost of beauty . ’
6 It concerns not just aspects of skill formation but also capital formation and the way these frame differential possibilities for organizational action through contrasting modes of rationality .
7 What , moreover , is the real relationship between the examination process in particular arts subjects and the way these arc actually taught ?
8 These interviews will concentrate on the culture of substance abuse among young people and the way these people perceive the risks involved int he use of drugs like alcohol , tobacco and heroin .
9 One of the earliest and most influential attempts to relate forms of organization to wider patterns of social relations was Max Weber 's analysis of different types of belief in the legitimacy of domination ( i.e. in authority ) and the way these can be associated historically with different structures of authority and therefore different organizational forms .
10 A wide range of factors shaped how people aligned themselves politically — from personal considerations or considerations of economic self-interest through to political or religious conviction — and the way these factors interrelated could differ over time to produce shifting patterns of popular allegiance .
11 substitutes a single law for a proliferation of national laws and thus within the given field dispenses with the need to resort to conflict-of-laws rules and the opportunity these give for forum shopping ;
12 This project focuses on three countries : Brazil ( with the largest foreign debt in the world , over $100 billion ) , Argentina ( $48 billion ) and Peru ( $14 billion ) — concentrating on the political and social consequences of repayment , and the influence these in turn exert on debt renegotiation , as well as the medium-term impact of the crisis on development strategies .
13 The latter is fascinating , especially in the glimpses it occasionally gives of the general principles and priorities which informed MI5 's work , and the unease these aroused in some quarters .
14 Unfortunately he pays little attention to the differences and the effect these have upon the implications of what we ascribe to animals whilst using the same forms of words .
15 It focuses on how human groups lived in the past and the effect these activities had upon the ecology of the landscape .
16 I think you will find that it owes it resiliency not to its form of organisation or administrative skills , but to the power of what we call beliefs and the appeal these beliefs have for its people . ’
17 And the care these young folk give us is fantastic .
18 And the importance these parties assumed reflected less the intervention of thousands of intelligenty than the support provided by millions of workers and peasants .
19 In the course of conversational interviews ( Burgess , 1988 ) that 1 conducted with Valerie Way and with Jenny Ball I followed up the themes of religion , gender and feminism and the impact these had upon their day to day work .
20 Citing ‘ the absence of significant interaction ’ between the museum and the mall these two ‘ sites of consumer culture ’ Ms Greenberg condemned ‘ the Western museum 's inability to acknowledge and respond to this new presence ’ , i.e. , the mall , labelling it ‘ one more episode in a history which continues to separate art and life , the past and the present ’ .
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