Example sentences of "in [noun] [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Above all he was right in arguing as he did in Formen that the absence of ‘ private property ’ in no way implies ‘ the law of the jungle ’ .
2 And that 's why you can expect to find the car in the morning with the windows all covered in saliva and the wing mirrors all bent and the chrome strips on the doors are often with tufts of cow hair .
3 Just hours later , an 18-inch hole was chiselled in the wall of a mosque in Greenwich and the holy chair of the Imam set alight .
4 Birds can be a considerable problem in Champagne as the grapes begin to ripen .
5 Both types of business , industrial and service , require investment , one in money and the other in man-power .
6 As regards the requirements referred to in part ( b ) of the national court 's question ( 2 ) as I reformulated it above , it may be noted in limine that the mere fact that fishing activity is carried out , on a self-employed basis , using a fishing vessel registered in a member state does not mean that there is establishment in that state .
7 Shortening line ‘ C ’ will make the kite sensitive in direction because the moment arm is reduced and your own arm movements will have greater effect .
8 Pluralism is regarded as an ideology which masks the reality of power and so helps to legitimise a system which is grounded in inequality and an absence of fair play .
9 The basic idea can be captured in minutes and the total concept fully realised in , at most , a couple of hours , which is a lot faster than it takes for the same degree of finish to be achieved in any other medium .
10 It has long been a nightmare in Moscow that the region could be highly vulnerable to Islamic militants from the indigenous population 's ethnic and religious brothers across the borders in Afghanistan and Iran .
11 It has long been a nightmare in Moscow that the region could be highly vulnerable to Islamic militants from the indigenous population 's ethnic and religious brothers across the borders in Afghanistan and Iran .
12 Dr V. Hasanali of the Soviet Institute of Climatology and Medicine , has stated in a paper published in Moscow that the vital activities of humans are affected not by individual factors but by the sum total of certain external factors .
13 March : March 5 : United Kingdom Prime Minister John Major had talks in Moscow with Gorbachev on the Gulf conflict and the situation in the Baltic states ; March 7 : the RFSFR and Czechoslovakia signed a trade co-operation agreement ; March 12 : it was announced in Moscow that the withdrawal of the 50,000 troops stationed in Poland would begin in April , although the process would not be completed before 1994 ; March 14-16 : following a tour of the Middle East , US Secretary of State James Baker visited Moscow for talks on the situation in the Gulf and the presentation of a six-point US plan for peace and stability in the Middle East ; March 18-20 : UK Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary Douglas Hurd visited both Kiev and Moscow for discussions on British-Soviet relations ; March 22 : Soviet-Romanian treaty of friendship and co-operation initialled in Moscow ; March 28 : Bessmertnykh held further talks in Tokyo in connection with Gorbachev 's forthcoming visit .
14 Also yesterday , the Interfax news agency reported in Moscow that the Commonwealth of Independent States might soon create a single body responsible for co-ordinating oil and gas supplies and investment in the energy sector .
15 This is one of the most ancient buildings in Moscow and a very early stone structure .
16 A few days later , George Kennan , chief of mission in the American embassy in Moscow and a foremost American expert on the USSR , submitted a very detailed analysis of Soviet aims in his " Long Telegram " .
17 The latest row , over which should own the Crimea-based Black Sea fleet , has revealed both the strength of irredentist feeling in Moscow and the depth of animosity in Kiev towards the northern neighbour .
18 The centre 's administrator general Marion Julien said museums throughout the world were keeping in daily touch with her for information about the row over the works , which are on loan from the Pushkin Museum in Moscow and the Hermitage in Saint Petersburg .
19 Its great attraction is that , because it was organised in conjunction with the Tretyakov gallery in Moscow and the Russian museum in St Petersburg , it contains many works never before seen in the West , some from far-flung areas of the CIS .
20 The Conference was met by a protest strike in Moscow and the Bolsheviks boycotted the proceedings .
21 Moscow radio reported on Jan. 9 , 1990 , that an agreement had been signed on direct co-operation between the Kurchatov Atomic Energy Institute in Moscow and the High-Tech Co. of China .
22 For many years I consulted for the American GE in Schenectady and the thing that struck me there was the way that when they wanted to attack a particular area they could mount an army of people on it , all of whom were pretty good . ’
23 After 6 washes in PBS , the third layer HRP-conjugated rabbit anti-goat antibody ( Sigma ) was added , the plates incubated for a further hour at RT , washed 6 in PBS and the reaction developed with ABTS ( 2'2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzthiazolone)sulphonic acid ) .
24 For beef the Commission was still obliged to buy in surpluses but the regulations were tightened .
25 I have been thinking a good deal , as I 'm sure you have , about the decline in income and the urgent need to improve matters .
26 Gold coin , for instance also occurs in the upper Thames valley and in Suffolk ; crystal balls are also found in Cambridgeshire-Suffolk and the Isle of Wight ; garnet in Kent and Suffolk .
27 A variety of patterns are apparent in these groupings ranging from small groups like Group VI concentrated in the valley of the Warwickshire Avon , and Group XV in Cambridgeshire-Suffolk and the Midlands , to larger groups which reveal connections between distinct areas , for instance Group I in Kent , Sussex , Surrey and the upper Thames valley , and further north Group XVI in East Anglia , Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire .
28 The changes in attitudes and the growth of interventionism
29 The change in attitudes and the granting of the franchise were largely due to the efforts of one family — THE PANKHURSTS .
30 Indeed Bruner himself ( 1986 ) , after studying cognitive thinking and play behaviour , has now become interested in narrative and the role of the reader .
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