Example sentences of "[art] ['s] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | has launched two new muesli products under the 's banner . |
2 | It sh it 's proposed the road should be raised on a level with the marketplace , and possibly also paved with this , this granite type paving , so that the pedestrianization idea would continue right the way across to the 's Court community centre . |
3 | Mainly because erm wires got crossed and er the 's Hall folks want us to go again to do exchange at the end of November , and Well we 'll discuss it a little bit further . |
4 | Erm that plied to the 's Head Hotel . |
5 | So if you wanted to er send parcels via the Railway , anywhere in the country , Then you could take your parcels into er the 's Head er sort of office there , erm and they were ferried down here . |
6 | Er I 'm not too sure where he lives cos he just , I think he 's just new to the town but if you give him a ring erm on the 's phone number and use the |
7 | Oh er so that was the 's day was it ? |
8 | I think Pa Paula on the 's information . |
9 | Well I went out to the 's place which is around here |
10 | First one I mind was the first was the 's Bakery . |
11 | And carry them , either carry them , or push them on a two-wheeled trolley , all through the round the lace market to 's , and various other And if I were lucky , and the 's van was going round the lace market , and I 'd got three or four parcels , I used to go with little Tommy and his horse and van , round the lace market , and he was delivering dress goods then . |
12 | Well of course when is out , they they give you the the 's number |
13 | It 's Jenny the 's hits , Andy 's slot one till five till Friday afternoon on Trent F M. |
14 | Stupid he said , meaning the whole lot of the 's so you can see like they 're all on the 's side ! |
15 | Er and again , you 'll see on one of the 's photographs I 've got , it shows , just to the right hand side as you 're looking at the front of the main archway , erm it had the legend , Railway , parcels receiving office . |
16 | So your ratios and the things you should be looking at , or the activity stuff is how many calls I 'm making , how many no 's do I get , and how much is each one of those no 's worth . |
17 | When he put both test tubes in b 's territory , b tried to attack a through the glass and a tried to flee ; Tinbergen then moved both test tubes across to a 's territory , and now a tried to attack , and b to flee . |
18 | When he put the two tubes in a 's territory ( A ) , a tried to attack and b to flee ; and vice versa . |
19 | UP 1 a knows the meaning of p iff a knows what difference the truth of p would make to the evidence of a 's senses . |
20 | A truer and weaker version of UP , UP 2 : a knows the meaning of p → a knows the difference the truth of p would make to the evidence of a 's senses , does not allow us to assert the sort of identity enshrined in MP , because it no longer contains the biconditional ‘ iff ’ . |
21 | a 's belief that p is justified . |
22 | So he proposes , as a fourth condition for knowledge that p , that the fact that p should cause a 's belief that p . |
23 | There are two ways in which it can be a coincidence that a 's belief is true , and both need to be ruled out . |
24 | But it includes the causal theory as a special case , since we might think that if the fact that p does cause a 's belief that p , then the two subjunctive conditionals will be true ( but not vice versa ) . |
25 | The theory gives an account of what it is for a belief to be luckily true , as follows : the extent to which a 's belief is luckily true is the extent to which even if it had been false , a would still have believed it , or if it were in changed circumstances still true , he would still believe it . |
26 | a 's belief 2 is justified |
27 | a 's belief 2 is caused by the fact that p is true |
28 | a 's belief 5 is justified , and then presumably |
29 | a 's belief 5 is caused by the fact that 5 is true . |
30 | a 's belief 4 is justified and then |