Example sentences of "[adv] to [art] [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He was , par excellence , both Pole and European , looking forward eagerly to the day of the creation of a united Europe — to him the ‘ motherland of motherlands ’ — free from the control of or undue influence from the two super powers . |
2 | Dissatisfaction and despair regarding domestic crises were strong motivating factors on both occasions as young intellectuals sought solutions to personal and national problems outside of China or as Wang wrote , ‘ looked eagerly to the west for the magic which would solve the problems of their country ’ ( Wang 1928 : 60 ) . |
3 | Brenda looked forward eagerly to the arrival of the Brownie Pack . |
4 | The applause , scattered at first , thickened , took on a note of real enthusiasm , and tinny music could be heard threading through it , and then J. J. Gerrard was coming through the wide entrance at the back of the dais , his rather fat face heavily serious over his pink shirt , walking purposefully to the chair in the center . |
5 | Bush objected fiercely to a decision by the House of Representatives on Aug. 2 , 1989 , to halve the funding available for mobilizing the missiles on the rail network . |
6 | I recall Leslie Compton of Middlesex bowling and keeping wicket in the same match and , somewhat to the annoyance of the spectators , padding and unpadding at the end of each over . |
7 | The walk may be continued beyond the ruins to Swinner Gill where a track leads upstream to the site of the Swinnergill Lead Mine , a scene of industrial devastation , a scarred landscape that nature has been unable to heal . |
8 | Raymond Radiguet was a youth of 12 when Modigliani painted him , a brilliant schoolboy who had won a scholarship to a Paris Lycée and began coming in daily to the city from the suburbs . |
9 | Thanks to her capable care — and much to the surprise of the doctors — he did n't succumb until the age of seventy , despite his daily ‘ only bit a pleasure ’ , ten Woodbines and a box of Swans . |
10 | So now he is clubbed to death instead , much to the surprise of the audience . |
11 | Much to the surprise of the bishops , he did this by a motu proprio on 15 September , Apostolica Sollicitudo . |
12 | Eva was out and up the steps before the other leader , greeting her deputy with an affectionate hug and kiss , much to the surprise of the man who was still climbing the steps . |
13 | Some of the Commandos could not resist the temptation and burst into the Horst Wessel song , rounding it all off with three hearty cheers , much to the amazement of the German prisoners . |
14 | Opting for a vast lunch in a pub , he ordered the dish of the day — haggis — then topped it off with a ploughman 's lunch and the landlady 's home-made black bun , much to the amazement of the proprietors . |
15 | The forecast mechanism proposed here is one which is much to the advantage of the buyer , since it carries no obligation upon the buyer to purchase all or any of the forecast quantities . |
16 | The arrival of Mosley would mean a British controlling interest at the top , much to the astonishment of the French and the Italians , the selfstyled ‘ Mediterranean mafia ’ who had hoped to retain a balance of power . |
17 | I sometimes wonder , though , whether they speak much to the occupants of the Labour Front Bench because I see the 1990s as the decade of the north-east and the north-west . |
18 | The Reagan administration 's success in building a series of ad hoc coalitions in support of key economic policy votes owed much to the brilliance of the White House staff with special responsibility for dealing with legislature . |
19 | Military organization , too , owed much to the whim of the Tsar . |
20 | Mortimer , who dominated the council , wielded power with no more tact and delicacy than had the Despensers or Edward II ; Henry of Lancaster , Mortimer 's erstwhile ally , was excluded from policy-making in 1328 , and in 1330 the earl of Kent was accused of conspiracy and summarily executed , much to the alarm of the other nobles . |
21 | Though he was , like McCarthy , anti-war , he believed Johnson to be invincible ; now he too entered the race , much to the chagrin of the McCarthy camp who accused him of muscling in on their act . |
22 | Kilburn had a charter dating from the reign of Charles II which was thought to be in the possession of a family who had the local pub , but they — and it — have disappeared , much to the chagrin of the locals who have tried to trace it . |
23 | By the end of the seventeenth century the high-street undertaker was trying his hand at the technique , much to the chagrin of the surgeons and the apothecaries . |
24 | That first success on the Dru twins came in 1878 when Clinton Dent , with his companion J. W. Hartley and Swiss guides Alexander Burgener and Kasper Maurer , reached the summit of the Grand Dru [ 3,754m ] — much to the chagrin of the local men . |
25 | Hence it was not surprising that its proposals were not speedily implemented , much to the chagrin of the House of Commons Energy Committee , three years later . |
26 | He claimed the ball had hit his bat , the square-leg umpire agreed and he was recalled , much to the chagrin of the bowler , Ian Beven . |
27 | There was no limit on the number of clubs then , and by the 1920s and 1930s the pros were beginning to take advantage — much to the dismay of the caddies , who often faced knee-buckling rounds hauling thirty clubs at a time . |
28 | It was typical of his thorough approach that after Arsenal won 7–1 at Wolverhampton , he spent nearly two hours at the team talk analysing what led up to Wolves ’ one goal , much to the dismay of the players , who expected only a brief meeting after such a handsome win . |
29 | Ian Fleming 's superhero first appeared in Issue 4 of ZZAP ! , much to the dismay of the reviewing team . |
30 | Much to the dismay of the missionary , they placed the two cups on the top of their heads and fastened the straps under their chins . |