Example sentences of "[verb] [art] clearly [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 However , given the clearly expressed strategic interests of the United States in the region it is probable that the latest Soviet ‘ neutralisation ’ proposal was not a serious attempt to bring the Western states to the negotiating table .
2 And it also has no clearly defined boundaries as to what is in the code and what is an infringement of it .
3 Despite the urgent need to halt economic decline , neither has a clearly defined policy .
4 To adopt this approach successfully it is important that government has a clearly defined framework for investment in research .
5 The man who has reversed the image of the horizontal heavyweight from Britain now has a clearly defined picture of the future in his head .
6 Taking the time-path to period t +12 , we obtain a clearly damped , cyclical variation in real national income .
7 The Directors have satisfied themselves that the Group has an effective system of internal control which includes a clearly documented and understood delegation of authority from the Board to the Executive Committee , and in turn to the operating companies .
8 He did not conduct a house-to-house survey , nor did he construct a clearly defined ‘ poverty line ’ .
9 Moreover , process production produces a clearly defined primary task for both management and men — that of keeping the plant running as near full capacity as possible .
10 This , however , may have been nothing more than the fact that nuclear energy constituted a clearly defined and nascent policy sector , and one which , since unlike other policy areas such as coal or agriculture there were hardly any national interests or groups to consider , could quite easily be separated from the rest of national policy making .
11 But I ca n't prevent myself thinking that the person who is to play Claudia should possess a clearly defined personality of her own .
12 A second likely reason for the ineffectiveness of project work is that the activity itself does not have a clearly defined purpose on the part of either the teacher or the pupil .
13 Everyone in an organization should have a clearly defined role .
14 In the auction room discretion must be used in bidding and the developer must have a clearly defined policy if the price exceeds the value calculated : he should either withdraw or bid only a marginal percentage above the calculated value .
15 ‘ A revolutionary socialist newspaper should exist for a specific purpose ; it should have a clearly defined perspective ’ , wrote Tariq Ali ominously in the anniversary editorial .
16 Do you have a clearly defined training programme for your managers ?
17 He finally succumbed to an uppercut and a big right in the 11th , yet rose to pursue a clearly lost cause until the end , the final bell being greeted with a standing ovation .
18 Such inducements can be caught by British law as having a clearly defined ‘ tendency to deprave and corrupt ’ .
19 At the beginning of each year a timetable is prepared and each year group follows a clearly defined , predetermined curriculum .
20 I think it would be beneficial for each committee member to have a clearly defined area of responsibility in order to spread the load and develop expertise in particular areas .
21 They form a clearly defined revolutionary group , and have been called the Pioneers .
22 He maintained that the good news about Jesus had a clearly defined form .
23 To the advocates of reductionism and materialism , or the sceptical at heart , the Hindus have a clearly defined answer for that condition :
24 Some of the University 's degrees are specifically vocational and have an established core or have a clearly defined course of study ; others are more open in their purpose and structure .
25 Individuals may feel happier if they have a clearly specified job within the organisation and know exactly where they fit into the workings of the organisation .
26 Trade unions are demoralised , have no clearly defined purpose anymore ; they are inefficient and ineffective , it was argued by some .
27 Herodotus ' History can be seen as a sermon on the text that Spartans and Persians , even in their great period of conflict , gradually came to value each other 's qualities:2 at first ( Hdt. i.153 ) Cyrus the Great scoffs at the Greeks who come together in a market-place to cheat each other ; by the end , the exiled Spartan king Demaratos is shown ( vii.104 ) lecturing a clearly impressed Xerxes on the subject of Spartan deference to law .
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