Example sentences of "[noun pl] in [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 So , if we are grooming a horse and it tries to cow-kick us , we retaliate with a sharp verbal reproach or a smack with the flat of the hand , and usually the horse decides to accept that we are the boss and minds its manners in the future .
2 One correspondent , seeking to explain the motives behind the attack on the meeting-houses in the west midlands in the summer of 1715 , informed Staffordshire MP , William Ward , that the rioters have got a Notion , that the Ministry and Dissenters have ruined Trade , on Purpose to make the Nation out of Love with the late Peace , and Peace-makers ; and because the Ministry , and secret Committee , and their Friends , will not let the Country have Peace and Trade , they resolve ( if they can hinder it ) the Dissenters shall not have a quiet Toleration .
3 From him , I heard of leys for the first time , and learned that he had found alignments of tree clumps in the countryside around his home .
4 A spokesman said the majority of thefts took place in the West End but there were also a series of car break-ins in the Parkside area .
5 There had been car break-ins in the area but there was nothing to connect Wolfenden with them .
6 Police at Antrim Road RUC station said there had been an increasing number of break-ins in the Oldpark and Cliftonville districts .
7 Further , the original theory of nationalization put forward by the Attlee Government after 1945 stressed that corporations should be free to take commercial risks in a way that would be inappropriate for government departments .
8 if the risks in a case substantially increase for the plaintiff , especially as in this case where the defendant was given leave inter alia to amend their defence , there should be no extension of time to a plaintiff to accept a payment into court .
9 But close identification with reform carries risks in a profession vulnerable to political change .
10 It has been argued that an appropriate definition of central in this context would be information related to risks and potential risks in a situation .
11 A secondary purpose of the study was to explore the possibility that the act of describing a film or specifically describing potential risks in a situation will alter drivers ’ subsequent assessments of risk .
12 As we pointed out in Chapter 14 , profits are the carrot that encourages firms to take risks in a market economy .
13 This is one way of reducing the risks in the scheme .
14 Risks in the home
15 But while most of us are fiercely protective when we shepherd young children across the road , we ignore many of the risks in the home .
16 Mathematical modelling and epidemiological studies may help quantify risks in the meantime .
17 The two main city obstetric units in Leicestershire possibly care for women with differing risk profiles , so that the excess risks in one population are offset by different excess risks in the other .
18 In the early part of the nineteenth century employees were assumed to consent to the risks in the work that they did .
19 Thus although the rating tasks performed in this study are not uncorrelated with the risk and accident estimates previously obtained for the stimuli from Study 2 there is no reason to assume that subjects were unnaturally concentrating on risks in the way they may have been for Studies 1 and 2 .
20 This may be through universal services which reduce social and economic risks in the community , or specific services aiming to improve the circumstances of vulnerable individuals and families .
21 Risks in the ring
22 Thus ministers no longer feel that the doctrine exposes them to special risks in the House but , by confining all the advice of the departments to ministers , it does ensure that they are so much better informed and briefed than their critics .
23 The colonial education system remained virtually intact after nominal independence in 1960 : two-thirds of university students studied law or the liberal arts in a country where peasants make up 90 per cent of the population and agriculture is the mainstay of the economy .
24 Their expertise lies in enabling others and others to take advantage of arts facilities and helping them erm or working with them to produce the things that happen , for example all the erm posters which were up during last years festival erm were produced in conjunction with community arts which erm has erm er produced on Ditchfern Place , erm and earlier this morning I was thinking that up as I think other councillors did , that more serious of projects which community arts are now entering into er in Chesterton in particularly in the children erm I think councillors went to Dickfield women 's photograph project and it is things like that about giving people confidence to join arts in a way erm with which they might never otherwise have experienced and the community arts have taken just that .
25 However , there was also a considerable consensus from the non-arts staff of LEAs and colleges that arts teachers were not helping the advancement of the case for the arts in a number of ways .
26 But what about the state of the visual arts in the home of David Cox and Edward Burne-Jones ?
27 I 'm going to tell you a little bit this morning about South East Arts and it 's support for the visual arts in the South East here .
28 , the largest comprehensive museum of science and arts in the country , has important departments in art and archaeology , natural history , geology and technology .
29 It was Tuesday lunchtime , and they were sitting in the restaurant at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in the Mall ; Ginny often ate there when she had had enough of the food and the company in the canteen of the British Council .
30 Although he now lives far from the art and theatre world of London on which he thrived for so long , Milligan would not want more arts in the countryside .
  Next page