Example sentences of "to [noun] [prep] the new [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Exhibition telling the history of the Pilgrim movement from its origins in North Nottinghamshire to settlement in the New World .
2 All existing records would be broken , and profits would flood in as the rich skiing culture flocked to resorts with the new hypersnow .
3 This is probably what accounts for the fact that being featured in one of those articles entitled ‘ Faces to Watch in the New Year ’ , or worse , ‘ Who Will Be Who in the Coming Decade ’ is almost inevitably a ticket to total oblivion .
4 Mike , an ex-philosophy student , was going off to Germany in the New Year ; Naomi from Bristol was about to embark on a Museum Studies course at university ; Liane , a weights and measures official , was one of the many volunteers who had helped at Uppark after the fire ; and Hugh , a quantity surveyor currently between jobs , set out to astound us over the next few days with his minimalist clothing ( some ancient jeans which were fashionably ripped at the crotch and a pair of lurid , exceedingly short shorts ) .
5 On 9 July , for the first time , she manages to introduce Modigliani 's name to readers of The New Age .
6 The exhibition is sponsored by the Friends of the Nationalgalerie and Telekom , and the catalogue ( Hatje , Stuttgart ) , by Hainer Bastian and Werner Spies , is available at the especially low price of DM39 so as to be affordable to visitors from the new Lander .
7 Further , some of the privileges incident to membership of the new sex may be sought .
8 It is thus eminently possible for the homosexual sub-culture to inform and , on occasion , dominate virtually every pop style since the 1950s and none more so than in mid-1980s — but still to find itself politically disenfranchised , socially marginal , and vulnerable to attacks from the New Morality .
9 The project has run to schedule throughout and we have maintained volumes , thanks to the co-operation of everyone in the mill who have accepted enormous changes in working practices and got to grips with the new system quickly and competently — its ultimate success will be a tribute to them all .
10 Planning manager for adult services Pam Wright recognises voluntary groups are having difficulty getting to grips with the new order .
11 But parents throughout Northern Ireland have been campaigning for the new test to be revamped or at least postponed until pupils have had time to get to grips with the new format .
12 Eva was less concerned with the impression she was making than getting to grips with the new job .
13 David O'Leary was on Sky Sports on Saturday saying that he hopes to back for the New Year .
14 I shall ride up on the Norton , ’ he told her , and there was a difficult pause in which she waited for him to suggest she should come up to Liverpool in the New Year .
15 The Church looked to Jesus as the new lawgiver who had abrogated the ceremonial precepts of the Old Covenant or Testament but retained its moral precepts .
16 I am sure that within the first month of the season , pens will be put to paper concerning the new law changes .
17 They 'll be playing live in the BBC 's Maida Vale studios and talking to Campbell about the new album .
18 Dorothy Croft , 68 , from Rochester , Kent , had planned to fly to Australia in the New Year to see her son and his family .
19 It will go to MPs in the New Year .
20 This rule can not be applied to items from the newer weaving countries ( Pakistan and the Balkans , etc ) which produce workshop versions of almost any type of design .
21 But the establishment of the bloc system in the late 1940s was to be a sad end to visions of the New World — Western or Eastern — restoring the balance of the Old .
22 RACE HATE , rape fear , miscegenation , a battle-scarred outsider 's fight to come to terms with the new society — the themes of Ford 's massively influential movie would provide rich pickings for '70s brats in the years to come .
23 Samuel Courtauld , the textile industrialist , and his supporters warned that industrialists must come to terms with the new mood in favour of government intervention .
24 Even after his death , when most of his servants had come to terms with the new regime , several remembered him with respect and affection .
25 Even after his death , when most of his servants had come to terms with the new regime , several remembered him with respect and affection .
26 The tensions in the purity feminist position , and the government 's own difficulties in coming to terms with the new movement , surfaced in the debates surrounding the 1885 Criminal Law Amendment Bill .
27 It is clear that the micro is here to stay and it is the responsibility of personnel managers to come to terms with the new technology and use it to their advantage .
28 At the time of the first interviews in June 1990 the authorities were grappling with the devolution of services to the units and the district 's attempt to come to terms with the new role of purchaser .
29 It is precisely because of this view that we discover the highest purpose of PATTERN PRACTICE : TO REDUCE TO HABIT WHAT RIGHTFULLY BELONGS TO HABIT IN THE NEW LANGUAGE , so that the mind and personality may be freed to dwell in their proper realm , that is on the meaning of the communication rather than the mechanics of grammar .
30 Given these factors , in particular the fact that default premia tend to vary over the trade cycle , it is not a trivial task to isolate factors related to competition in the new issue market .
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