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

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1 Eventually the traditional route to professional training will emerge whereby qualified community interpreters will , after a defined period of professional practice and experience , be trained to pass on their skills .
2 Eventually the total rose to 350 women on the platforms of trams and buses , and at Whit 1940 the first ten motorwomen were trained .
3 Wheeler , however , did not always pass on the relevant information to his assistant .
4 Well he had to switch on the interior light to be able to fill out the form .
5 Clearly the point had arrived in September 1947 where fundamental decisions had to be taken on the American commitment to Korea .
6 He was taken on the indispensable visit to Holford Glen , and it was there , seated by the side of the brook , that the brief exchange took place which Coleridge was still repeating in his old age : ‘ Citizen John , ’ Coleridge remarked , ‘ this is a fine place to talk treason in ! ’
7 BRITAIN 's first solar-powered lavatories have switched on the National Trust to cutting its £2.5 million power bill by using more ‘ green energy ’ .
8 As the original solute is successively diluted , so the mirroring , shape-specific water polymers build up and continue to pass on the shape-encoded information to successive potencies long after the original starting material has been diluted out .
9 He is the natural author to take on the popular character to so successfully revived in ‘ Batman 2 ’ .
10 discount because they take in students , but will they pass on the full tax to the students ?
11 The difference between the way we saw life as young people — especially the amoral attitude to sex — and the conventional way of portraying it on screen was so great that I knew we were on the verge of a big change .
12 LENNOX LEWIS last night threw down the ultimate gambit to world heavyweight champion Riddick Bowe saying : ‘ If fighting me is so personal , let's do it and send all the money to Africa . ’
13 And then Josie whispered , ‘ Follow me , ’ and started down the carpeted stairway to the lower level .
14 I walked the 30 paces down the narrow alley to the very spot where the paper girl first heard the running steps of her assailant before she was knocked senseless .
15 I rushed down the dark passage to the lavatory with both hands at my face .
16 He stopped trembling as quickly as he had begun a moment before and seemed to withdraw down the dark passage to the daydream he was locked in when they first arrived .
17 He took them through the cavernous littered kitchen , where an old woman in a grey shawl was mixing something in a basin on the table , and down the dark passage to the studio .
18 The commandos blew in its steel door , and , leaving Chamberlain , who could hardly help himself along , to guard it , they ran down the long stairway to the pumps 40 feet below .
19 She looked down the long ride to where , at the distant foot of its slope , the lake shuddered in the wind .
20 Her eyes ran down the black jacket to where the man 's watch was half hidden by a white cuff .
21 Sweeney Agonistes takes its audience back not simply to what was seen as the childhood , even babyhood of ritual and civilization , but further down the evolutionary ladder to the most primitive level of that ‘ amorphous protoplasm ’ which makes up the human egg .
22 Consequently , degeneracy can not occur and , assuming b i , … , b m are integers , it is only necessary to round down the optimal solution to the perturbed problem to obtain an optimal solution to the original problem .
23 Lowe stripped to swim , and getting on the trunk of an uprooted tree , hoped to be carried down the eddying flood to some part where he could obtain assistance .
24 Gooch , typically , tried to play down the huge blow to England his own illness has been .
25 Lastly they went down the main staircase to the Director s office .
26 Mildred squeezed through the gap and set off as fast as possible along the corridor and down the spiral staircase to the yard .
27 We walked on until we reached an unlit stretch of the Corniche , then climbed over a low wall and down the short slope to the river 's edge where we were out of sight of the sentries .
28 They did not squeal and race about in panic , but allowed themselves to be driven through the house and down the steep ramp to the underground slaughter-house without protest .
29 Instead , ordinary dogwood , wineberries and bamboo ramble down the steep bank to the side of the garden , providing a natural extension to the view of Blaise Park beyond .
30 To push down the British price to that of the cheapest one quoted by any ‘ fly-by-night ’ would have a catastrophic effect on business worldwide .
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