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

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1 Beardshall and coworkers have shown that suppression of H pylori with tripotassium dicitratobismuthate and metronidazole decreased the response of gastrin to gastrin releasing peptide stimulation .
2 SCOTVEC is delighted by the response of centres to Phase 2 of the Advanced Courses Development Programme .
3 The research examines the response of households to taxation — how it affects decisions to work , spend and save — and the relationship between the personal and company sectors .
4 In 1473 Gloucester ordered Thomas Molyneux , the hereditary steward of West Derbyshire ( Lancs. ) , to farm the park of Croxteth to William Molyneux .
5 In 1473 Gloucester ordered Thomas Molyneux , the hereditary steward of West Derbyshire ( Lancs. ) , to farm the park of Croxteth to William Molyneux .
6 The addition of ornament to beauty makes beauty truly appear beauteous .
7 The addition of cytology to tissue biopsy therefore allowed malignancy to be confirmed in 29 of the 47 patients ( 62% ) .
8 Whether the addition of cisplatin to 5-fluorouracil and leucovorin had any influence on the apparent beneficial effect of palliative chemotherapy in this study remains uncertain .
9 A further reported development has been the addition of enzymes to slurry .
10 Mr Lamont tried to present the addition of VAT to fuel as an environmental initiative meeting the Government 's international commitment to reduce global warming .
11 Thanks to the addition of fluoride to toothpastes and , in many places , to drinking water , decay on the smooth surfaces of teeth has become relatively rare in America .
12 Subgroup analyses from 433 patients in the SCATI trial provide the only available mortality data on the addition of heparin to thrombolysis in the absence of aspirin .
13 The majority of visitors to Hong Kong , however , develop an instant buy , buy , buy mania .
14 The position was well illustrated by the ENB in their publicity about the introduction of the Central Clearing House : " The majority of recruits to nursing are girls aged 18–19 .
15 Lactate was measured in the incubation medium by a spectrophotometric assay in which lactate dehydrogenase ( Boehringer — EC 1.1.1.27 ) catalysed the reduction of NAD to NADH , which was subsequently measured at 340 nm .
16 His main interest in mathematics was in its foundations , his ‘ The Foundations of Mathematics ’ ( 1925 ) being the culmination of the reduction of mathematics to logic undertaken in the Principia Mathematica ( 1910–13 ) of Bertrand ( third Earl ) Russell and A. N. Whitehead [ qq.v . ] .
17 Simmel concludes this section of his Philosophy with an argument that money represents the end point of that cultural process which may be described as the reduction of quality to quantity , a line of argument which was to prove particularly influential in later traditions of Western Marxism .
18 The error of Rationalism lies in its attempt to reduce the complexity of experience to rules , to technical knowledge .
19 ABOVE : The Wolverton Royal Train crew of 30 June , 1966 , that accompanied the Royal Train conveying the Prince of Wales to Caernarvon Castle for his investiture on I July , 1966 : top left to right , Ernie Henson ( electrician ) , Gerald Kingston ( fitter ) , Dick Henson ( trimmer ) , Tony Carter ( electrician ) , Eric Barnes ( finisher ) , Arthur Cowley ( painter ) ; front row left to right , Jack Preston ( fitter ) , Arthur Harrap ( fitter ) , Stan Buder ( electrician ) , George Stevens .
20 Ms Stephens ( 31 ) , a journalist from west London , looked healthy but tired after a gruelling journey back from the Himalayas which began on Thursday with a five-hour march from the base of Everest to Pheriche , the nearest town accessible by helicopter .
21 More striking still is the variety of responses to evolutionism in different countries .
22 In the counties likewise , members of parliament were continually bombarded with requests for small offices in the customs for friends of voting freeholders , though the practice of leaving the small posts in the seaports to the burgh members restricted the supply to the provision of officers to towns which were not royal burghs .
23 For their part , many NHS trusts have responded to the freedoms they now have to manage their affairs , to improve the position of low paid staff , and to introduce greater flexibility into the provision of services to patients .
24 We have no direct control over the provision of services to clients by suppliers .
25 [ T ] he mental health sector will be working in collaboration with the health service in developing a ‘ Care Programme Approach ’ to the provision of services to people who have been diagnosed as having a serious mental illness .
26 The provision of secondments to business and education is not a new concept .
27 Existing staff should be trained in the provision of training to others .
28 The fact that by 1991 the situation had begun to change more generally was due less to Authority initiatives — which remained on a relatively small scale — than to a combination of growing commitment at school level and the legislative requirements in respect of school governing bodies and the provision of information to parents about curriculum and assessment .
29 Consultations with ministers , the provision of information to administrators , direct communication with diplomats and naval officers , all fell within the ambit of less public means of attempted influence and can be most clearly illustrated from the record of the African Institution which has been somewhat overlooked by earlier writers .
30 Michael Phizacklea , the Institute 's director of finance , replies : The overriding consideration in the preparation of the Institute 's accounts has always been the provision of information to members .
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