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

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1 He tugged at the flask of whisky inside his tunic and eventually worked it out .
2 It is a moving story that leaves one marvelling not only at the bravery of Middleton himself but that fate had brought so many courageous men together in the one crew .
3 Michael Fallon , who is defending Darlington for the Tories , has hit out at the surcharge of £19 on poll tax bills which have already gone out .
4 . Now what I 'm now going to do , I 'm going to tell you what these initials are , so if you , on the back of the piece of the paper , you make some notes , because some of these obviously are going to be what you , your personality is , but you also need to note , if you look at the type of things that you can expect from different people in the teams , or the strengths and weaknesses that some people may have in your team .
5 No but you see , you 've got to look at the type of , we look at the type of illnesses that people suffer from in a minute , and sort of , you know , a day here , a week there , somebody has a month somewhere else .
6 So far we have been looking at the type of grave-clothes provided for the very wealthy .
7 The introduction of the microcomputer into the environment allows us to look much more closely at the type of information required on personnel and how to use it to best advantage .
8 Using the scrambled security telephone , he dialled the program controller at the Voice of America broadcasting headquarters .
9 Wendy Wassyng Roworth , Professor of Art History at the University of Rhode Island , Kingston , is the guest curator .
10 Two lecturers at the University of Swansea are lecturing in a local pub .
11 He studied at the University of Oxford at a time when Colet had thrown off the old method of scholastic teaching , which consisted of repeating the comments of previous interpreters of the Bible , and instead , in his lectures on St Paul 's Epistles , was explaining their historic background and expounding their spiritual truths .
12 As chancellor of the University of Glasgow , the Duke of Montrose was solicited for the scholarships in the University 's gift tenable at the University of Oxford , known as Snell 's exhibitions , while Sir James Grant of Grant was constantly being asked for bursaries for students at the University of St. Andrews .
13 This precise and disheartening indictment was drawn up by the late Dr Enid Starkie , Reader Emeritus in French Literature at the University of Oxford , and Flaubert 's most exhaustive British biographer .
14 Naturally , this did n't affect her competence to teach at the University of Oxford , because until quite recently the place preferred to treat modern languages as if they were dead : this made them more respectable , more like the distant perfections of Latin and Greek .
15 The Reader Emeritus in French Literature at the University of Oxford and Honorary Fellow of Somerville College , who was ‘ well known for her studies of the lives and works of writers such as Baudelaire , Rimbaud , Gautier , Eliot and Gide ’ ( I quote her dust-wrapper ; first edition , of course ) , who devoted two large books and many years of her life to the author of Madame Bovary , chose as frontispiece to her first volume a portrait of ‘ Gustave Flaubert by an unknown painter ’ .
16 Roth supported himself by freelance writing until in 1939 he received a specially created readership in post-biblical Jewish studies at the University of Oxford , where he was also mentor and host to Jewish students .
17 He was one of the foremost early exponents and defenders at the University of Oxford of the teaching of Thomas Aquinas , the Dominican philosopher and theologian .
18 He was Isaac Woolfson Professor of Metallurgy at the University of Oxford from 1966 to 1992. was part-time chairman of AEA from 1982 to 1984 and has been a part-time member since then .
19 She writes : ‘ My time spent ‘ at the University of Oxford ’ broadened my outlook in many respects and this helped me with my academic studies and writing from then on' .
20 It was prepared for the UN 's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change by Martin Parry , the director of the Environmental Change Unit at the University of Oxford and an expert on the greenhouse effect in agriculture .
21 He was lecturer in clinical neurology at the University of Oxford , consultant at consultant in neurological disability at the Radford Infirmatory , Infirmary and the Rivermead Rehabilitation Centre , Oxford .
22 Michael Argyle in the department of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford has written several books and articles on laughter 's close companion , happiness .
23 Higher education was available at the University of Hanoi where some Vietnamese students were introduced to revolutionary nationalism/national communism : although many more were able to ingest ideology and political doctrines in France itself .
24 A half day release each week enabled Paula to travel to tutorial classes at the University of Anglia 's personnel management department .
25 After he got his lower second at the University of Loughborough , she told Mrs Freeman at 82 that Henry was ‘ on course for a Nobel prize ’ .
26 At the University of Loughborough there were several people who went on record as saying that you could always get a laugh out of Henry .
27 Speaking at the University of Loughborough in October 1986 , the Governor of the Bank of England explained it as the outcome of ‘ deregulation ’ and subsequent ‘ structural changes ’ in financial markets .
28 OWL , which has 89 staff , has developed Guide hypertext software , based on work done by Professor Peter Brown at the University of Kent .
29 He got a residency for the next year at the University of Kent and spent half the week in Canterbury .
30 Recent advances in NMR applications to porous media organised by the Collaborative Project in Magnetic Resonance , will be held at the University of Kent on 14–16 April 1992 .
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