Most ambitiously, in 1961 an 11-metre-tall Jacob Epstein sculpture was displayed on the roof of Waverley Market. |
|
This ambitiously conceived and lavishly presented exhibition aims to celebrate the whole range of Venetian Renaissance art. |
|
Academics usually plough a narrow disciplinary patch, whereas intellectuals of his kind roam ambitiously from one discipline to another. |
|
This poem is rooted in the tradition of many Scottish artists of looking confidently and ambitiously to the future of Scotland. |
|
This manifesto rings with a youthful sincerity, but his stories and poems ambitiously attempt to embody the ideal. |
|
The building conforms to the natural bedrock shelf, using an ambitiously constructed terrace to extend the floor surface to the west and to expand and regularize room sizes. |
|
She pursues her task ambitiously, tirelessly, and scrupulously through the major texts of three canonical writers of early modern English literature. |
|
The ambitiously named Four Seasons Apartelle was by far the cleanest and most decent-looking lodging house among those found within the tangled grid of side streets. |
|
With just over a year to go until the Lord Davies' deadline that he ambitiously set the FTSE100 for 2015, the time for discussion is over. |
|
On the contrary, we need to look at them openly and constructively, to take the four points together and deal with them ambitiously. |
|
More ambitiously, the idea has been to work with farmers to formulate appropriate district policy recommendations. |
|
Developing countries reiterated that areas of their positive agenda should be ambitiously dealt with to level the playing field. |
|
In the third thrust we are continuing to work ambitiously at improving our efficiency. |
|
In 2002, Valeo generated results which give it the resources to ambitiously face the future. |
|
The network functioned through transit hubs, front companies and, most ambitiously, creative off-shoring of manufacturing. |
|
In 2004 the Group decided to launch itself ambitiously into the future, with an unambiguous priority to growth. |
|
Governments are also too reluctant to clearly and ambitiously commit themselves e.g. by setting clear, ambitious and measurable national targets. |
|
They are self-referential, sculpted by parody or subversive of conventions, and ambitiously re-inventive. |
|
More ambitiously, an aglet should be able to share information with other aglets whenever they happen to meet. |
|
Europe must act quickly, confidently, ambitiously and in a focused way. |
|
|
My heartfelt plea is that this programme should be continued, ambitiously developed and coordinated, if possible, by a single office within the Commission. |
|
Perhaps more ambitiously, the Unity Project has tackled the duplication of product usage data that confuses and frustrates communication planners in Canada. |
|
Palace, one suspects, may need to think more ambitiously and the final whistle had barely gone before one bookmaker had them as favourites to go straight back down. |
|
America gave West Africa's cotton producers some vague pledges that it would reduce domestic cotton subsidies more quickly and ambitiously than other farm supports. |
|
Sainsbury's and Tesco, for example, have recently begun processing bakery waste into animal feed. More ambitiously, campaigners want Britain and the rest of Europe to lift the swill ban. |
|
He finds the components of this culture largely in religious rituals of the Navajo, the Ashanti, the Ndembu, the Akan, and most ambitiously in the Dogon. |
|
The pair are both entered in the Kingmaker Novices' Chase at Warwick and, more ambitiously, the totepool Game Spirit Chase at Newbury and have each strung up good sequences. |
|
The Yongle Emperor ambitiously planned to move his capital to Beijing. |
|
Many of New York's most celebrated personalities hitch-hiked here, or rode the rails from wherever it was that they spent their youth dreaming ambitiously. |
|