Example sentences of "when [art] " in BNC.

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1 We say someone has AIDS when the virus has weakened the body so much that certain new illnesses are developing .
2 Since you are agreeing to make regular payments over a number of years , it is probably easier for you to pay by Banker 's Order or Direct Debit Mandate when the payments will automatically be made from your bank account .
3 The length of the covenant will have been specified in the Deed , and it will terminate when the last specified annual payment has been made .
4 Members working on behalf of a prisoner learn a lot about that country — its culture and political allegiance for example — knowledge that is no longer useful when the case is closed .
5 When the case comes to trial the inexperienced attorney ( a good lawyer may have managed to get the charge reduced to straight murder ) will be faced by a prosecutor who may well specialize in capital law .
6 She told me that she was eight years old , the eldest of six children , when the security men came to the army camp to arrest her father , an officer in the Moroccan army , in 1972 .
7 Before their arrival at Heathrow , their passports and tickets were confiscated ; when the British Airways plane landed , they were separated from the other passengers , put into a van and driven around for several hours before being forced back on the plane and sent out of the UK .
8 This aside , when the reader has found a monograph , what will it contain ?
9 The critic is also likely to spot the gaps in a group show , when the best works are not being shown , say perhaps because they are in private collections .
10 A fragment from an altarpiece can not be appraised in just the same way as an independent portrait ; and a craftsman 's skill is esteemed more accurately when the materials used are rightly identified .
11 Perhaps the most usual description of aesthetic experience in the last hundred years has occurred when the critic has been faced with the need to react to one isolated work of art .
12 A sense of mystery and futility is imparted by events at the Grange and on the Ridge , and that sense is heightened by what takes place in the city when the party catches fire and rioting breaks out .
13 When the friendship begins to fail , he says : ‘ What she drew out of me remained extraordinary to me . ’
14 The affair seems to him to belong to the town , to have no future , and they are parted when the town comes under fear and hazard .
15 What matters is what happens when the individual , who incorporates his past , incorporates and transforms the divisions which are part of that past .
16 Charlie 's departure is the first of several , and this event is succeeded by the announcement of a further theme when the rabbi 's thunderings pass over the heads of his congregation and the writer notes : ‘ in later years I would wonder how different my life might have been if a few people , those closest to me , had been frightened — just a little . ’
17 In the days before glasnost — which his fictions may be thought to have rehearsed and predicted , but which could well mean that his fictions will no longer be for the West what they have been so far , when the thing that they deplore was still there in its entirety to be deplored — Kundera was forced into exile in the ‘ free world ’ of the time .
18 Kapuscinski speaks of the liberals who lost out when the Shah was expelled , but Bakhtiar is not particularised .
19 When the Europeans decide to return , their guide decides to stay , and is immediately killed .
20 Suicide tends now to command sympathy , even when the reasons for it are hard to understand .
21 The smile contrasts , moreover , with the expression to be imagined on the face of the male lead , Patrick Standish , in Amis 's novel of 1988 , Difficulties with girls , when the cat in Patrick 's life pays him a visit .
22 On this occasion she is at a posh party , where she has taken a glass of champagne , but only ‘ to be sociable ’ — a motive which in anyone else would have driven Patrick to contemplate another of the umpteen blows he feels like unleashing — when the novelist unleashes one of his phonological jokes , which play on vagaries of pronunciation .
23 But when he does resume them , when the time comes for him to make his next leap , the suggestions made in the course of this affair of his fiction fatigue and literal turn — suggestions which receive both rebuttal and support from within the shape-changing dialectic represented by The Counterlife — will not deserve to be forgotten .
24 As when the golden sun salutes the morn ,
25 And when the sun came up in no-man's-land , it was hot .
26 But they are great just the same when the great things do not come along .
27 Remember this when the pace hots up !
28 When the school did do a production I played Celia .
29 O'Dowd , Rolston , and Tomlinson ( 1980 ) point out that when the centralized state comes in simply to administer and maintain law and order , it tends to reproduce relationships which pre-exist its intervention .
30 When the British state began its policies of social interventionism from 1945 , it succeeded in fragmenting the local power base of unionism by centralizing the sources of welfare and making them at least in part available across the sectarian divide .
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