Example sentences of "but [art] " in BNC.

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31 But the report is worth knowing by those who want to know the poem .
32 But the passage certainly suggests that there was a distance between Levi 's view of Israel and the views that Commentary chooses to publish .
33 In The Periodic Table he mentions a woman ‘ dear to my heart ’ who was murdered at Auschwitz : but the book on Auschwitz does not discuss his relationship with her .
34 But the literal Levi is a writer who has his own way of interesting himself in the contrasts which have been attributed to Babel .
35 The cost of training at a summer school over a five-week period will vary with the different establishments , but the overall fee is likely to be around £700 ( 1990 prices ) , for all students , whether from Britain or overseas .
36 This seems an odd way of going about things , but the advising panels do carry a professional adviser so that talent is not merely being judged by local civil servants .
37 But the less elaborate you can be the better .
38 Exeunt all but the bastard
39 But the thing is that now , I mean now that most of them have got some sort of house , an' there 's food an' money around , they know they 're better off but , honest , they know they 've got nothin' as well .
40 A director may have made it plain that he has a definite intention for a character , but the student may not always see this straight away .
41 But the positive interest of an agent is some guarantee that your work is not passing by unnoticed .
42 Everything in this chapter may seem terribly grey and pessimistic , but the truth is that acting is probably the most optimistic of all professions — it is the nature of actors to hope .
43 The voice and movement work is very important but the professional requirements have changed , particularly in respect of film and television and there should be more training in this area .
44 And I 've rejected nothing , but the things that happen when working expand the horizons and the understanding .
45 It is the most important medium for getting known by the general public and affecting the attitude of employers but the theatre is still the best place for learning your trade .
46 In a detailed study of the Stormont archives , Bew , Gibbon , and Patterson ( 1979 ) have shown that there were indeed different currents within the Stormont administration but the ones which predominated belonged to those among the ruling protestant classes who were bent on preservation of the status quo for their own purposes , including their own dominance of the protestant alliance as well as their particular sectional interests .
47 But the British government was still involved in the reproduction of antagonisms in the Ulster statelet , rather than passively accepting the perpetuation of inequalities and discrimination against the catholic — nationalist minority .
48 But the technocratic approach did not lessen discrimination but reproduced it in a subtler form .
49 The church certainly had to follow this path in the face of the external constraints ; but the practice did strengthen its status , power , and the structure of political divisions .
50 But the fight did not prevent the fundamental beliefs in the nation and ‘ the historic integrity of the island of Ireland ’ , as nationalist parties described it in their New Ireland Forum ( 1983 — 4 : i. 28 ) , from remaining basic to the perceptions of both parties .
51 But the form as a whole should be recognized as inimical to protestants , especially when pursued in the arena of politics .
52 But the bulk of its laity and Northern clergy , and probably more so its industrial and farming classes , are low church and evangelicals , the more protestant and anti-catholic end of the Anglican synthesis .
53 The protestant version has variants as to how pure this church is or whether it remains sinful , but the evangelical version which is the basic one in the North of Ireland opts absolutely for ‘ Jesus Saves ’ ; the community , no longer medium of salvation , tends to take on a visible , earthly role , an occasion of grace and a support for religious ‘ this-worldly ’ activity .
54 But the political significance of this culture is that where opinion counts and where the catholic — nationalist remnant actually experiences the coercive power of protestant loyalists and the British army in the Northern statelet , there violence has all the more support .
55 But the optimism for change in the Republic of Ireland remains somewhat unqualified .
56 But the remaining 43 were to be elected by local and national politicians on a vocational basis : that is , they had to be elected to five panels for which they would qualify by having the requisite vocational expertise — administrative , cultural — educational , labour , industrial and commercial , and agricultural .
57 But the bishops ' statement does not say so .
58 there must be , there has to be a separation between Church and State and we totally endorse and emphatically reiterate that , but the separation between Church and State does not mean a separation between conscience and the electorate 's responsibility in voting .
59 But the country areas and particularly the West were overwhelmingly against the proposal .
60 But the church 's clerics still took offence , particularly at the point that local people should be encouraged to take an interest in the schools by having some financial responsibility for them through local government .
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