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

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1 Thus many third and fourth generation computers provide a range of facilities ( such as several data-types ) in an attempt to cover the whole spectrum of applications in one design .
2 Erm er it 's basically that there is no stated requirement at present from any of the four nations , for this aircraft to operate on ships er back in the early days of the programme when the the French were involved er we looked at the possibility of designing an aircraft er to provide the whole spectrum of capabilities from air defence er ground attack and also maritime operations off ships and er we we certainly experienced some difficulties in reconciling all those things in one design , which was adequately capable in each of the areas .
3 Paul is prescribing a true turn-round in the whole arena of relationships at work .
4 The Trust is now examining the whole concept of trees as windbreaks ; what is clear is that trees and shrubs should filter the wind and provide shelter without creating a solid barrier and that mixed planting , wider belts and regular thinning will be essential in achieving this .
5 The request is made so that each question can be marked throughout the whole pile of scripts in one operation , before the next question is examined .
6 The whole net of relationships between community and subculture , class and centralizing monopoly capitalism thus took on a different shape .
7 Shaking her head at the kick , she lashed out at the whole row of stores opposite her cathedral and dispelled them to dust .
8 For example , the whole evolution of Bells in Scotland since the war was due to Raymond Miquel 's strategy on sales . ’
9 He read the whole range of papers on most days , and was appalled by their cynical and gleeful exploitation of Callaghan 's faltering stand against what was labelled ‘ mindless militancy ’ at Labour 's grass roots .
10 the whole range of concepts concerning inner states of all kinds and their elaborations and meanings ;
11 Moreover , answers for small loans were concentrated very much at the short-repayment-period end of the scale , while answers for large loans were spread more evenly across the whole range of options from 6 to 36 months .
12 It was the biggest exercise of its kind mounted by Courtaulds , with questionnaires so far going to 15,000 employees across the whole range of operations in the UK , continental Europe , United States , Latin America , the Far East and Australasia .
13 One could talk about many other areas of improvement : the huge 68 per cent increase in real spending ( over and above inflation ) by Government on community care services since 1979 ; the 29 per cent increase in real spending on the whole range of benefits for elderly people ; or , in a completely different field , the improvements in public transport which have , for example , seen the number of rail passengers increase by 14 per cent .
14 For them the whole range of feelings of shock , disbelief and anger come into play .
15 Feminism 's concern with sexual politics extends into the whole range of representations of sexuality , masculinity and femininity , from advertising to pornography — it intervenes in the culture and in so doing seeks to change the ways in which men and women inhabit their masculinity and femininity .
16 The series aims to make a modest ‘ distance learning ’ contribution to meeting the needs of teachers working with the whole range of pupils with special educational needs by offering a set of resource materials relating to specific areas of the primary and secondary curriculum and by suggesting ways in which learning obstacles , whatever their origin , can be identified and addressed .
17 Assessment based on Statements of Attainment will need to take into account the whole range of abilities to be found in any Statement of Attainment and the context — task and type of historical content — in which attainment of these abilities is being shown .
18 For these reasons the term has been chosen for use in the title of the present book and throughout the text to denote the whole range of children from those who are totally blind through to those who possess useful but impaired vision .
19 Furthermore , each child learned at a different pace in every subject area and this pace was uneven , reflecting the whole range of influences upon the child external to life in school .
20 It looked at the whole history of dealings between the two companies .
21 And finally , there 's no one with a more impressive grasp of the whole field of geophysics on Earth — or the Moon for that matter ( as his recent article ‘ The Moon 's deceptive tranquility ’ in New Scientist , vol 96 , p 174 , testifies ) .
22 The fact that in the event the volume of training proved insufficient , relates ( as I shall argue later ) to the whole issue of priorities in teacher education and to the relationship between expectations in curriculum reform and means available .
23 This is an important point which is crucial to the whole question of attitudes to , and satisfaction with , housework :
24 The new world was one in which there was an increased emphasis on the social obligations of the wealthy , on the whole question of relations between management and labour , and on the legitimate degree of social and political power that could be exercised by wealthy elites .
25 How far this interpretation can be extended to the whole gamut of characters for which Burdon had shown the populations to be polymorphic must be very doubtful .
26 I 'll just run the whole gamut of styles of music .
27 Evidence which could potentially threaten the whole system of beliefs in the efficacy of witchcraft is thus reinterpreted in consonance with the basic premisses which it challenges .
28 no particular reason for the rise its general movements and not a serious movement as far as we 're concerned includes the whole element of debtors from ourselves to our wholesale debtors which is our own manufacturing operation where they 're selling to outside customers there 's nothing particularly significant in that .
29 Edward had dropped the whole cargo of gifts by the time he had got down the twenty iron rungs of the ladder .
30 Where logically necessary , it generates new linking text , and tries to rearrange the whole assembly of statements into their neatest logical tree .
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