Example sentences of "and in " in BNC.

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1 The biggest changes are in the length of time people ill with the disease are now surviving and in the nature of the illnesses themselves .
2 ACET has already been drawn overseas and is working in Romania , Uganda and Tanzania , in partnership with local church-based projects and in conjunction with government programmes .
3 Our assistance is offered sensitively and in a culturally appropriate way .
4 This has the effect of cancelling your existing covenant and in return you commit yourself to making payments under the new covenant .
5 We are the largest independent provider of practical home care to people with HIV/AIDS in the U.K. From 7 regional offices we have provided practical care to over 1000 people in the lat 3 years and in the last 12 months we cared for at least 1 in 5 of those who died of AIDS in the U.K.
6 Some of the bodies showed signs of torture and in many cases personal documents had been removed to prevent identification .
7 But there are still prisoners of conscience in Europe , and in every other region of the world .
8 On 26 March 1991 he was returned to Safi Prison and in protest he began a hunger-strike which resulted in his falling into a coma , due to his illness , a few days later .
9 The government had not acknowledged their arrest but the team had heard rumours of the women 's whereabouts in a military camp and in fact found them there .
10 During the period of 1984–5 , more than 2,800 Sri Lankans sought asylum in the UK and in May 1985 , a visa requirement was imposed on the nationals of Sri Lanka , the first time such a requirement was imposed on the nationals of a Commonwealth country .
11 Leo Tolstoy asked the question , and in 1898 his remarkable book with that title gave his reply .
12 Teachers of art are more likely to write books of instruction , and in their efforts to educate their students may make comments about the traditions they admire and from which they hope their students will learn .
13 Her National Gallery choices of pictures were examples of problems posed to artists by colour , and in a video talk she demonstrated how these artistic problems had been solved .
14 He welcomed the varied responses of artists and writers to modern life , and in his own poetry explored innovations .
15 No prizes can be offered for pointing out that at a given moment there are artists of several generations working and in very different ways .
16 Perhaps the first , and in the end the most lasting , impression that one carries away , is of the contrast between the golden-cream light and space and the exquisite feeling of harmony engendered by the ceiling as opposed to the deep blue darkness and turmoil of the ‘ Last Judgment ’ .
17 Post-structuralist texts expose the role of language in deferring meaning and in constructing a subjectivity which is not fixed but is constantly negotiated through a whole range of forces — economic , social and political .
18 The results of these studies were published extensively in catalogues of private and public collections , and in what in French are termed catalogues raisonnés , that is to say complete lists of artists ' works .
19 He spent the rest of his life in expertise , painstakingly cataloguing the pictures and drawings of his favoured period , the Italian Renaissance , and in giving advice , notably to the great Bostonian collector , Mrs Gardner , and the main dealer of the period , Joseph Duveen .
20 Disputes over authorship are fiercely fought , and in the nature of things , frequently impossible to resolve with finality .
21 H. W. Janson 's History of Art , the standard college textbook , did not at that time mention a single woman artist ’ ; and in discussing the period reviewed by the exhibition , various choices of media made by women artists are chronicled , for , ‘ Many women artists eschewed painting — especially abstract painting — as a domain polluted by long saturation with male dominant values , and developed their themes in performance . ’
22 The first difficulty is , despite the destructions , the enormous number of existing pictures , many of them signed , and in one way or another more or less Bellinesque .
23 Sometimes subjects require considerable explanation or interpretation , and in these cases the museum catalogue can give definitive help .
24 In short the pictures in an art museum have been closely monitored , often through decades and in a few cases for centuries , so full descriptions that appear in the catalogues have a thorough-paced authority .
25 The shows put on in Paris at the Salon , and in London at the Royal Academy , were a means of creating sales for artists at a turning point in the history of patronage ; as there developed a middle-class market for literature , so there developed a comparable market for art .
26 In the next stages there is pleasure to be found in identifying subjects , and in discovering that pictures can convey messages expressively .
27 Guerrillas , then , is shaped in order to accommodate its three zones , and in accordance with a distinction between the political and the phantasmagorical , though there are moments when phantasmagoria , futility , threatens to envelop the island — Grange , Ridge , gangs , government , politics and all .
28 It is the sort of place which will always revive and rebuild , and in such a place Salim 's part is to make good , carry on .
29 Salim is an Aeneas who makes it to London , where those of his blood are founding a way of life , and he has his Dido both in Yvette and in Metty .
30 And in so doing it can often convey that a past is not a thing to be discovered .
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