Example sentences of "of this " in BNC.

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1 The care of people in the community , with are ill with HIV infection and AIDS , together with the education of schoolchildren to help prevent the spread of this terrible disease is becoming more and more urgent . ’
2 Chris Southwick , director of ACET ( Scotland ) , said , ‘ With the opening of this office in Glasgow , ACET 's volunteer home care is now available to 95% of those infected with the HIV virus in Scotland . ’
3 The success of the initial pilot programme has been recognised by the Ministry of Health and the Institute of Health Education and led to Maurice , Kate and Ana meeting with Government officials and representatives from UNICEF to establish a long-term training programme in five Romanian regions , starting in November of this year .
4 The rapid growth of ACET since its inception in 1988 has made the creation of this new post a priority .
5 The remit of this fledgling group was to provide the highest standards of unconditional care to men , women and children ill at home with HIV/AIDS .
6 We make the most of this and scoot off to the hospital .
7 No part of this publication may be reproduced , stored in a retrieval system , or transmitted , in any form or by any means , electronic , mechanical , photocopying , recording or otherwise , without the prior permission in writing of the publisher .
8 The cost of this booklet has been met by World in Need .
9 To be eligible for ACET Home Care you must be HIV positive and require assistance because of this .
10 Dr. Zúñiga was warned that the police might seek reprisals against him , but although he informed the authorities of this , novo specific measures of protection were apparently offered to him .
11 The 1989 figures indicate a reversal of this trend with 276 death setences passed and a sharp reduction of commutations to 23 .
12 If you have served in the armed forces and would be willing to assist in the work of this group , or if you can assist with contacts in ex-service organisations like the British Star Association , please write to : .
13 ‘ We are well aware of this danger and do n't blindly accept what people say , ’ states Malcolm Smart .
14 For the purposes of this book , just two assertions will have to content us : first , some works have been intended by their makers to be seen as art ; second , there is a consensus today that other works are to be described as art .
15 Meyer Schapiro , who had a specialist concern with Romanesque art , was an open-minded historian of this sort .
16 James S. Ackerman , the architectural scholar , makes use of this phrase in writing about art and communication : ‘ What a work of art communicates can be described only in terms of an interaction between an object and a subject ; it communicates nothing at all unless someone is there to look at it .
17 Mao added : ‘ To study the development of this old culture , to reject its feudal dross and assimilate its democratic essence , is a necessary condition of our new national culture . ’
18 The excellency of this extraordinary man lay in the propriety , beauty , and majesty of his characters , the judicious contrivance of his composition , his correctness of drawing , purity of taste , and skilful accommodation of other men 's conceptions to his own purpose .
19 The subject of this study is the disintegration of the Renaissance .
20 The author started his career in the Victoria and Albert Museum , where there is an important group of this sculpture ; his book had a double origin in a museum exhibition and a series of lectures .
21 One has only to imagine what would happen if the books on the shelf behind the sitter 's head were upright , like the others , to realize on what delicate adjustments the solidity of this amazing structure depends …
22 I have before noticed that what are commonly called warm colours are not necessary to produce the impression of warmth in landscape ; and this picture affords , to me , the strongest possible proof of the truth of this .
23 A consequence of this tradition is that the sculptor 's own personality may receive less prominence in a monograph than a painter 's , as the effect of patronage given or withheld can be decisive in a sculptor 's career .
24 Perhaps in the last decade of this century something of a change in attitude to sculpture is becoming evident .
25 The Hudson memorial is not widely known , but the scope of this monograph is exemplary .
26 The main strength of this sort of monograph is its potential for detailed interpretation .
27 A hero of this period was Giovanni Morelli , a remarkable Italian connoisseur who started publishing essays on pictures in public collections in 1874 .
28 The results of this process can be read in detail in catalogues raisonnés , which often give a blow-by-blow account of the arguments of scholars over the years .
29 This was not his intention but iconographical echoes of this sort do not surprise him .
30 Then he says something about the formal appeal of this sculpture to twentieth-century Western taste , because of its freedom from the canon of realism :
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