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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 include provision for pupils to talk and listen in groups of different sizes and to a range of audiences ;
2 Government policy has signally failed to do this and the result is a profession which is demoralised by its responibility to the children , to parents , and to a host of bodies and organisations , all of whom want their ‘ say ’ .
3 In 1983 , in order to extend the international scope of our work , a survey questionnaire that had been pre-tested with social work educators from Australia , India , Israel , and the United States was mailed to all member colleges , universities , and national affiliate associations of the International Association of Schools of Social Work and to a list of individuals who had been identified as experts on paraprofessional social welfare personnel in their own countries or internationally .
4 This was to lead to an increase in real wages and to a decline in rents for land , and in so far as these can be used to measure the standard of living of the people , they suggest that the condition of the peasantry improved markedly in the fifteenth century .
5 And then her mother 's voice snapped back loudly , ‘ And to a number of others , because she 's a whore !
6 There are plans to make shares available to staff and to a group of sponsors headed by Die Zeit 's literary editor Fritz Raddatz .
7 The knowledge gained is concerned with the history of the development of the built environment and , as in other disciplines , the resulting insights contribute both to a critical understanding of the present day , and to the formulation of strategies for future development .
8 The use of portable fire extinguishers particularly of the class A type and of hose reels should be encouraged to the requirements of the B.S. Code of Practice , and to the Scale of Allowances , of the Fire Offices ' Committee .
9 But to pursue this point further at this stage would take us beyond our immediate concerns , since it impinges upon questions related to money , prices , rates of realised surplus-value , and to the problem of crises .
10 This ranged from the reproducibility of the film which is now telescoped through television and video ; to the opera or concert through the increased availability of gramophone recordings from the 1920s ; and to the reproduction of paintings themselves through photographic means in books , magazines , and television .
11 This , however , scarcely deserves such a grandiloquent title , for it is not all-comprehensive , it is too incomplete and makes no claims to being self-contained and to the construction of systems .
12 As it is vital that all children have access to the rich curriculum and to the kind of experiences that involve pupils with purpose it must be desirable that , at times , the special needs teachers work alongside mainstream class teachers .
13 When one reads Green 's journals there are various entries which refer to ‘ McQueen ’ , and to the preparation of proofs and the parcelling of plates for dispatch to London for printing .
14 Most economists would agree that a single European currency , which would also imply a European Central Bank to control it , would encourage trade thanks to the absence of uncertainty in relation to exchange rates and to the elimination of transactions costs inherent in dealing in a multiple of currencies .
15 The fact that in the event the volume of training proved insufficient , relates ( as I shall argue later ) to the whole issue of priorities in teacher education and to the relationship between expectations in curriculum reform and means available .
16 It can be argued ( and was so argued by the Saudis ) that any over-supply had been provoked by the encouragement that the over-rapid price increase in the 1970s had given both to fuel conservation on the part of consumers and to the economics of projects to develop substitutes for oil and especially OPEC oil .
17 Elections to the Chamber of Citizens and to the Chamber of Republics , which together comprised the new Federal Assembly , were scheduled for May 31 .
18 But the idea that social behaviour is oriented by and to the behaviour of others is one from which we can start .
19 One consents not only to actions but also to the holding of certain positions and to the imposition of duties and burdens .
20 knowledge of abortive techniques was widespread in factory districts and spreading due to the interchange of information in the mills , to increase in therapeutic abortions carried out by surgeons , and to the publicity of quacks for their abortifacients .
21 Further to our meeting concerning the Council Tax Staffing Report on the Control and Collection Sections I am writing to confirm our agreement in order to progress this matter to Committee and to the making of appointments .
22 The work is being extended to other gases and to the composition of waters and their impact on environmental health .
23 However , the matter at issue in the cases now before the court is not access by vessels of member states to fishing activities in the Community but access by nationals of member states to vessels and to the operation of vessels .
24 Calls were made for an end to commercial strikes and to the involvement of children in the process .
25 This led him towards ideas of conservation of energy , and of a unified field ; he believed that light and magnetism must act upon one another , and to the astonishment of contemporaries he indeed demonstrated that a magnetic field will rotate the plane of polarization of polarized light .
26 A number of troops were stationed in the town , some in the grounds of the workhouse , and others at the Bedford Infirmary , and in January 1915 the master 's attention was called to the need to disinfect military blankets and clothing , and to the provision of baths for verminous soldiers .
27 The University published the address as a special supplement to the Newsletter and the text was circulated to members of the Universities Funding Council and to the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals .
28 Integration implies a process whereby the economies and decision-making procedures of participating states become progressively linked , to the point of fusion , and to the development of institutions whose powers , in transcending those of the individual member states , become supranational .
29 Will the Prime Minister therefore tell us what specific proposals he has made for supporting economic projects in the republics of the former Soviet Union , particularly in the distribution industries , which are obviously of basic importance to economic growth and to the development of markets ?
30 The ground , a huge stretch of perfect emerald turf , was bordered to the north by fir trees and to the south by mothers having fearful squawking matches about the authenticity of various junior teams who were n't allowed to ride bona fide polo ponies .
  Next page