Example sentences of "[art] [noun pl] to each " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Motivated by rather more than just military considerations , the EFA was an exercise in European unity , and was governed by the need to give a ‘ fair share ’ of the contracts to each of the participating countries . |
2 | The additional information contained in the notes to each chapter is invaluable , and , like the rest of the text , intensely readable , human and lively . |
3 | Yeah , well tell him you 'll put him in his diary , I I would have thought if you 'd just sent him the notes to each meeting he would come if he would , if he could , and if he ca n't , he ca n't . |
4 | By tuning the X-rays to each element in turn we can ( in principle ) pick up the specific local arrangement of atoms . |
5 | You can imagine that the inputs to each RAM chip are taken from a random selection of points on the retina . |
6 | At first she thought of wolves as she listened to the furtive movement in the woods to each side of the river . |
7 | If the data have been ordered into contigs then the positives should occur in overlapping runs ( Fig 3 ) , and inconsistencies in the data are immediately apparent by eye because all the hybridisations to each clone are visible , including those which do not fit well with the current order of clones and probes . |
8 | ‘ That 's bad ! ’ whispered the dairymen to each other . |
9 | and Clifford , no Clifford said , the lads to each other are we going out again dad you know cos oh Margaret was in , yes , and there was some other boys , the boy across the road was eating something and the boys said and Clifford said do you mind if I just sit in the chair and be quiet for just a few minutes and he just sat in the chair and had his heart attack |
10 | People had been reading him , recommending the books to each other , lending them . ’ |
11 | The 1924 National Origins Act reduced the total to 150 000 and re-adjusted the quotas to each nationality in proportion to its numbers in the existing population . |
12 | From the outset d'Indy 's editorial colleague Charles Malherbe , in his collation of sources , had ensured that , whatever might have appeared in the main texts , the appendices to each volume contained nothing untoward . |
13 | Once the Fourier spectrum of a signal is known , the overall response of any linear circuit to it can be found readily by superposing the responses to each harmonic component . |
14 | Apart from the splash of the water , and the squeak and thump of the diving boards , the calls of the Indians to each other and an occasional squeal of delight from the child , it was still , and a thrush , lodged in a tree on the common beyond , dominated for minutes together the air above the sequestered pool . |
15 | For it has come to pass that through marriage certain feelings are communicated by the partners to each other and , more important , to society at large . |
16 | Meanwhile spies in the Red Fort reported the developments to each of Shah Jehan 's four sons , all of whom assumed that the long-awaited succession battle was now imminent . |
17 | Howard and Felicity move slowly about with their champagne , like everybody else , trying to look as if they are heading somewhere purposeful , and quietly making little humorous comments on the proceedings to each other as they go . |
18 | Pink , Pink shouted the chaffinches to each other , oh Pink what a day |
19 | The channels with which each of the tanks connect at the upper level , and into which they immerse at the lower , lie parallel to one another , but the entrances to each of the upper channels , against which the appropriate tank abuts , are the width of an entire plane apart . |
20 | If the topic relates to the entire Region , sufficient documents should be sent to each District Council 's Library Headquarters , to allow distribution of the documents to each branch Library and for headquarters use . |
21 | The first paragraph of the letters to each of the parents showed that the school was over-subscribed and that to admit their daughters would be detrimental to the provision of efficient education : therefore the case fell within section 6(3) ( a ) of the Act of 1980 . |
22 | But I think the person is not an ingredient in the single thought : he is rather constituted by relations of the thoughts to each other and to the body … the grammatical forms ‘ I think ’ , ‘ you think ’ , and ‘ Mr Jones thinks ’ , are misleading if regarded as indicating an analysis of a single thought . |
23 | ‘ It leads to more ideas being put forward and the benefits to each company will be greater . ’ |
24 | As our defence systems against pathogens improve , so does the adaptability of the pathogens to each new environment we provide , a point which is amply illustrated by the emergence of apparently ‘ new ’ diseases such as Legionnaire 's disease , myalgic encephalomyelitis , ( postviral fatigue syndrome ) and acquired immune deficiency syndrome ( AIDS ) . |
25 | If it 's man and wife arguing , or man , female arguing , and they 're the only two in this place , and I 'm satisfied that it 's gon na be quiet , and there 's no injuries to each other and it 's not gon na flare up , then that 's a domestic , that you can be quite happy with . |