A new form of art had come about quite naturally, yet its presence took the art world by storm. |
|
Such a change is only likely to come about when the majority of that group is populated by truly computer-literate individuals. |
|
If today life without the possibility of progress seems insupportable, it is worth asking how this state of affairs has come about. |
|
The intelligent design argument counters evolution by claiming some processes are irreducible and couldn't have come about piecemeal. |
|
Part of this irrational anxiety has come about because A is not a very cuddly kid right now. |
|
In Frazer's case we can, I think, see how this process of disillusionment has come about. |
|
It has come about as a result of continually talking to clients and keeping them posted as events developed. |
|
My father was adamant that change could not come about without a violent revolution and a proletarian dictatorship. |
|
The situation has largely come about, apparently, because of a substantial drop in the value of scrap metal. |
|
Many of the best experiences of my life, as well as some of the worst, have come about as a result of my being banjaxed. |
|
The exercise has also come about because of housing developments in the area which could affect population trends. |
|
Despite carrying topsails she misses stays when we try and come about and I am forced to wear ship. |
|
Well some incredibly good things have come about because of it, but some heinous atrocities were carried out in its name. |
|
As the Lexington heeled over and started to come about and face the tanker fleet. |
|
Both patrifocal and matrifocal households come about because of the need for economic betterment. |
|
My hope is that sufficient pressure will come about to halt the nefarious practices occurring in that accursed place. |
|
Fifth, implicit reconciliation can come about through the help of a third party. |
|
This year's price reductions have only come about because of meaningful threats from the regulator. |
|
I am much more inclined to think that their alcoholism or addiction has come about as a consequence of their situation. |
|
If we turn to various explanations of how these incidents come about and how to prevent them, we face a babel of opinions. |
|
|
His book provided no mechanism whereby the drift of continents could come about. |
|
Wars often come about as a result of aggressive, reckless, thoughtless, and deliberate acts by statesmen. |
|
But his elevation to this position of influence has come about because of the changes in society worldwide. |
|
The move has come about as a result of a case brought by a prisoner in May who was forced to slop out in jail. |
|
The simple thirst for revenge on the part of a few could be enough to derail any peace agreements that might come about in the future. |
|
She said the present system had come about mainly due to the restrictions imposed by international institutions. |
|
The problem has come about because my wife's date of birth was scanned in incorrectly. |
|
True partnership and community can only come about between distinct individuals. |
|
So how did this obsession with theory and preparation actually come about? |
|
Seldomly do you come about a debut album that is this impressive. |
|
How did the new harmony between church and state come about? |
|
The last few years have shown that excesses can come about when finance capitalism and modern technology are abused in the service of naked greed. |
|
Many of these advances have come about in microprocessors and microswitches, which have made electric wheelchairs lighter and more maneuverable. |
|
How that will all come about from a legal point of view we shall have to sort out in the course of the year. |
|
Mr. Maka Kotto: If the convention should come up short or fail entirely, do you think such a project will ever come about? |
|
Increased environmental performance can come about through the adoption of clean technology. |
|
It does not come about through reforms that do not go all the way and that do not have the confidence and support of our populations. |
|
But since paradigm changes often come about suddenly, it's a safe bet that the new approach will be implemented faster than we think. |
|
A general social acceptance of plastic surgery has come about and it is leading people to think that because they look a bit tired they need an operation. |
|
Without anyone actually making a policy choice to go that route, it would simply come about as a result of lack of money to sustain capabilities. |
|
|
The European Union welcomes the positive developments in Adjara and the peaceful manner in which these have come about. |
|
How do these misconceptions about particle physics come about, and what can particle physicists do about them? |
|
In many cases, desirable features of the universe would not have come about, unless seemingly unconnected states of affairs had come together in the right sort of way. |
|
For this to come about, there must be unceasing prayer to nourish the desire to carry Christ to all men and women. |
|
Regrets that come about from not listening to the still small voice that nudges you toward the place where you perhaps would rather not go, yet must go. |
|
The Mayor, who is a regular Saturday morning visitor to the market, said that it was doubly pleasing for him that the market had come about during his mayoralty. |
|
Residents are yearning for quality services in their respective areas and this can only come about if these institutions are made smaller and efficient. |
|
Loopholes come about through the pleading of property owners who dare to suggest that there is merit to keeping private property safe from the grasping hand of power. |
|
The information has come about begrudgingly, through access to information. |
|
Yet many social changes must come about before they are fully accepted in the world of education. |
|
Events either develop out of some true human necessity or come about unexpectedly. |
|
When these free radicals meet a sulphur compound stinking thiols come about. |
|
The catharsis may come about at the physical level as a kind of cleaning or detoxification. |
|
It is the common story of every aspirant and disciple, and unless the two find a meeting ground the solutions do not come about. |
|
Some of these take-overs have come about under rather dubious circumstances. |
|
This reframing has come about as the result of focusing on promoting safer communities for the full diversity of women and girls. |
|
This assurance will come about naturally from good communication and a high level of cooperation. |
|
By bringing faculty and staff to the community, that's where that transformation will come about. |
|
Had modern Tatar autonomy not come about so painlessly, it would have been easy to read the bloodshed as yet another case of the inevitable clash of civilizations. |
|
The proposed amendments to the shared-revenue policy are needed to keep up with the changes that have come about as a result of that discussion. |
|
|
It is far more accurate to say that what success we have seen of democratic self-rule in the ex-colonies has come about, not because of colonialism, but in spite of it. |
|
The prospect of private involvement, even where it does not come about, may galvanise public agencies into carrying out reforms. |
|
The rights of workers in Canada did not come about because of the goodness and graciousness of governments. |
|
The decision to undertake the path of diaconal formation can come about either upon the initiative of the aspirant himself or by means of an explicit proposal of the community to which the aspirant belongs. |
|
Though there is a growing clamor for the establishment of a Special Court on War Crimes, this can only come about at the behest of the TRC, upon conclusion of its work. |
|
Here we are, trying to move this great European project forwards, not by shoring up privileges that have come about by accidents of history, but by opening the door to the new. |
|
It needs also a reasonable measure of flexibility so that a natural cooperation in freedom and cordiality can come about in a voluntary community. |
|
Peace and stability in Europe rest on the principles that borders are inviolable and that political change must come about through peaceful means. |
|
Mix with a whisk, a well-bound, whitish mass should come about. |
|
All of these achievements can only come about in a secure environment. |
|
The favourable effects of alcohol only come about at a later age. |
|
The anticipated upturn in business activity has not come about. |
|
For example, the President mentioned the publication of the staff economic projections, which had come about as a result of a request from the European Parliament. |
|
I am talking about people whose illegal status has come about for bureaucratic reasons and who have not been expelled and who once again fulfil the admission criteria. |
|
In the Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace, we have a strategy allowing us to act meaningfully to ensure that peace does indeed come about. |
|
Through the Jubilee education and advocacy campaigns of churches and their allies around the world, we came to believe that change really could come about. |
|
Now most of those gases come about as the result of burning fossil fuels. |
|
Some key informants noted that these improvements have come about because their region has been actively involved in training police, developing templates for their use, and reviewing court briefs with police. |
|
Fashioned from soy protein, tofu and Chinese mushrooms, they come about as close to a beefy texture as you'd want to get. |
|
Recognition is often withheld when a new state is seen as illegitimate or has come about in breach of international law. |
|
|
European integration has primarily come about through the European Union and its policies. |
|
If a new referendum is to happen, it should come about by the will of the people, and not be driven by calculations of party political advantage. |
|
This may have come about from the shepherds of the islands who would challenge each other using their long walking sticks. |
|
It took many years for this to come about however, because of the lack of money. |
|
This solid performance has come about in the main because of lower fares and more seat availably. |
|
How does ut come about, sorr, that whin a man has put the comether on wan woman he's sure bound to put ut on another? |
|
And where did the idea of the hello Ladies movie come about? |
|
This new knowledge may have come about by any combination of population movements and cultural contact. |
|
All the levels of the universe, the macrocosm, come about through the radiation or manifestation of God, the metacosm. |
|
If the Lords have a distinct and elected composition, this would probably come about through fixed term proportional representation. |
|
The last development has come about due to a reconcentration of state government activity in the capital rather than growth in government itself. |
|
It is a fair assumption that Confederation could never have come about without Macdonald's free-and-easy personality and his peculiar mixture of talents. |
|
The fundamental value of this initiative lies in the fact that it did not come about as a result of an official proposal, and that it was not dreamt up by some Brussels bureaucrat. |
|
The smaller Member States must not be confronted by a fait accompli, with a common foreign and security policy having come about because the larger countries have already adopted positions. |
|
The European Union is convinced that the stability and prosperity of a major country like Nigeria cannot come about through increased repression, nor the prolongation of military rule. |
|
This honey can naturally crystallise over time, and the white mottling which can come about as a result is not a sign of any denaturing or deterioration. |
|
Ideas always come about if you alter your way of looking at things. |
|
Intellectual property rights, together with the monopoly and the standards that sometimes come about mean that much of the right to competition is rendered ineffective. |
|
European solutions and ways of thinking have become successful precisely because they have come about through institutional competition between different countries rather than having been decided on centrally. |
|
As to that time span, all clearly definite forms of life or species seem to take a megayear more or less to come about and be present for a while. |
|
|
She pointed out that string theory now suggests that there are gazillions of other universes, so life in ours could have come about by random chance. |
|
The first authorised film version of Dracula did not come about until almost a decade later when Universal Studios released Tod Browning's Dracula starring Bela Lugosi. |
|
For that to come about we have basically got to win most of the remaining four, and Hemel next up will definitely be a tough one if we want to stay in the race. |
|
He raises the interesting, if untestable, idea that a moderate multiparty system might have come about eventually even under SNTV as LDP support declined. |
|
Her new book is a celebration of oddness and uniqueness in translations that come about as the result of some sort of slippage from the mimetic into the non-mimetic. |
|