Example sentences of "[is] [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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31 Yeah that 's that the nursing ones were good .
32 I 've heard you selling the guy that showed you these two manifestos one by the Tories and one by the Labour and the one that stuck in my mind it 's that the Labour Party will have a minimum wage to comply with the rest of Europe .
33 The one 's that the volunteers planted are thriving quite well .
34 Copsey is nor a dirty player and it would have been tragic had he been sent off in his first international ’ — IEUAN EVANS ( Wales captain ) on the Tony Copsey incident in Dublin against Ireland .
35 One of the difficulties is that every person 's situation is different .
36 The difficulty is that every handful of weed that 's pulled out is likely to contain its fair share of aquatic creatures too .
37 The only real clue to spotting them is that every homestead has electricity and if you see the buildings , you must find the wires going to them before making an approach .
38 The result is that every ledge , from those that would take a small tent to those that a modern rock climber would blanch to see , is packed with birds .
39 The reason we receive massive newspaper publicity for reports like Empty Quarters and Nobody 's Home is that every property is illustrated .
40 She wrote : ‘ The reason China is in the state it is today after four decades of ‘ peacetime construction ’ is that every time a situation arises when people should shout ‘ No ’ to avert a serious policy error , there is nothing but silence . ’
41 The fact is that every ten minutes somebody in Great Britain is seriously injured in an accident .
42 The nub of informed consent , they say , is that every human of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what will be done with his body , and they trace the history of informed consent citing the Nuremberg Code ( 1949 ) and the Declaration of Helsinki ( 1964 , amended 1983 ) , which in the aftermath of war atrocities , attempted to ensure the principle of informed consent .
43 The underlying idea here is that every corporation , willy-nilly , acquires large amounts of information that is potentially useful in a competitive sense ; but that this information is scattered throughout the firm in its various divisions , units , departments and so on .
44 A key point to note is that every stage of processing was able to affect the score of a reading ; thus , for example , a reading that scored more highly during the first ( semantic conflation ) phrase could later be overtaken by another which allowed easier reference resolution .
45 The thing about Kennedy is that every time I hear he has done something outrageous I think ‘ Oh God ! ’ , but then I spend a few hours working with him and leave thinking what a good heart he has and how serious he is as a musician .
46 The most significant difference is that every unit of the poly-HEMA chain contains a hydroxyl group .
47 But the most shocking thing about this new black-humour novel is that every life-or-death horror story is true , says its author , consultant anaesthetist Dr Philip Keep .
48 But we do have to face the paradox implicit in our contributing to the discourse , which is that every word we say on the subject of difference just underlines the salience and the importance of a division we are ultimately striving to end .
49 The only rule in componential analysis is that every opposition must be classified by plus or minus values on a single dimension ; [ +/; — female ] would be equally valid , and the fact that the analysts chose the other alternative doubtless reflects their ( predictable ) perception that men are the norm of humanity .
50 Following Pierce , Eco recognizes the problem of ‘ unlimited semiosis ’ , that is that every ‘ meaning ’ proposed for a representation is itself a representation that has a meaning , etc. , in infinite regression .
51 If there is one certainty in a crisis , it is that every Tory MP will put party before country .
52 The danger in exclusively privileging the socio-cultural context in the interpretation of human institutions and behaviour is that every social phenomenon becomes so context-dependent that it can not be translated across cultures .
53 The trouble with All Fools ' Day is that every newspaper story suddenly looks suspect , but we assure subscribers that IBM Corp really is paying Louis Gerstner all that money it ca n't afford , that the sports shop that sells guns in Kingston really did close early and the UK government is considering a Congestion Charge , but we confess that we have no evidence that the next computer industry consortium will be a catch-all called Computer Industry .
54 Asked how he rates himself as a novelist , he replies : ‘ All I can say is that every single book has sold more than the last .
55 The idea is that every person has another person ( or sometimes a group or committee ) to whom he or she has to account for the proper discharge of responsibilities .
56 No such luck : what makes sex much more complicated but also much more interesting and rewarding is that every single one of us has to learn what it 's all about for ourselves — as unique individuals .
57 ‘ The starting point of our domestic law is that every citizen has a right to do what he likes , unless restrained by the common law , including the law of contract , or by statute .
58 The most important general piece of advice on examinations is that every question in the paper that the student is expected to and can answer should be answered .
59 The most important thing to remember is that every idea , comment or observation must be supported by facts or reasons .
60 In its simplest form , the idea is that every particle has every possible path , or history , in space-time .
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