Example sentences of "'s relation to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 For analysis of women 's relations to technology in the present day , the meat at the centre of this sandwich , we are left with just three articles .
2 Rock arguments in the late 1960s thus focused on commercial ‘ sell-outs ’ , on the transformation of culture into commodity , on rock 's relations to community and community action .
3 I myself think that the writer 's relation to things as they are changes according to what he or she is writing .
4 It leads us moreover to draw a further important distinction , which makes the analysis of the infinitive 's relation to person even more precise .
5 This way of regarding the infinitive 's relation to person can be applied moreover to the uses already examined in Chapters Two and Three , where this form is related to another verb in the sentence and thus provides a coherent explanation covering all the uses of both versions of the infinitive by means of a single principle of analysis .
6 In other words , Pooh 's relation to Rabbit 's statement , telling him that there 's honey , is essentially the same as his relation to the bees which he uses to observe indirectly that there 's honey .
7 By John Roman Baker , comprising Crying Celibate Tears , The Ice Pick and Freedom to Party , these award-winning plays explore man 's relation to man in a time of crisis , where the war against the HIV virus is at is fiercest .
8 The error is well-ingrained , however : in chapter 5 we look at another famous image of the world 's relation to God coined by William Paley , that of a watch to a watchmaker .
9 There is a fundamental ambiguity , however , in the protagonist 's relation to language : the levelling of meaning and the abolition of distinction is at once the device used by parody and the effect it attacks .
10 I want only to suggest that however closely those match , however complete they are , therefore , in the pairs they form , they all also work as imagines of the writer 's relation to language , now confident , now uncertain , now lonely , now roistering and so on .
11 The very notion of making a literary point about the writer 's relation to language , however true , will have a cruelly mocking echo .
12 In comparison , ‘ One 's relation to Riemenschneider 's Altar of the Holy Blood is a little passive : one waits and the shift of light will change its mood and meaning . ’
13 The advantage of this argument is that it allows one to define literature 's relation to reality in a much more positive and coherent way : both literature and the reality which it represents are of the same order and , according to Bakhtin , this order is ideological .
14 The implications of these principles for man 's relation to nature are , in Tillich 's view , profound .
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