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

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1 A burnt-offering of dedication to God .
2 A colour leaflet could be produced for the trail which would be available free of charge to visitors .
3 Currently available free of charge to members of the CA Practitioner Service , Technical Bulletin will shortly be available to non-members of the service at a cost of £95 per annum .
4 The models are , uncharacteristically , giving their services free of charge to directors George Michael and Thierry Mugler , although filming had to be postponed because of the models ' hectic schedules .
5 Hotels showing this symbol offer an exciting ‘ package ’ of entertainment & attractions or an excursion at certain times of the year FREE of charge to customers staying 3 nights or more .
6 British Airways then flew me free of charge to Paris , where the Niger authorities gave me permission to cross their territory .
7 The special will be distributed free of charge to US schools .
8 This is free of charge to clients staying in Brand .
9 We can add also to the fact that fifteen billion dollars a year right , is lost by er third country exporters , alright so we still add another fifteen on there per year that is erm errr oh yes , same study again erm suggest that in nineteen eighty six , eighty seven the year they look looking at , over forty percent , right of support to U S farmers , forty percent , nearly half of all support to U S farmers , quote merely offset the losses created by policies of other industrialised countries alright so nearly half of the support given to farmers in the U S alright we t to get them to stand still in in er in numerative terms , right .
10 So the claims that are made for the good of prison does your not , your not impressed by , well we have to give right of reply to Patricia as you work at Cottonvale .
11 I had more signed copies than normal of Pole to Pole .
12 Laws without strong enforcement are words without deeds , and the tragic truth is that courts in both England and the United States have displayed a general unwillingness to mete out harsh punishment to those found guilty of cruelty to animals and an even greater reluctance to render guilty verdicts in the first place .
13 Tamils felt deprived of access to government and of their traditional route to advancement , jobs in the civil service .
14 Debt net of cash has been reduced more than 60% from its peak in the third quarter of 1989 and debt net of cash to capital ratio is now 42% compared with a peak 61% in second quarter 1991 ; the company 's goal is to get to 25% or less .
15 As for Ireland , short of trip to Lourdes , it 's not easy to see where the instant cure will come from .
16 Because China was often short of material to fuel ovens , a cuisine sprang up where a strong flame cooked food very quickly .
17 In ‘ That 's all … my friends ’ , at the Montaigne gallery until 15 December , the young French artist has created a setting full of allusions to artists such as Courbet , Millet , Man Ray , Duchamp , Marinetti , Klein , Warhol , Raysse and Cesar .
18 But Coleridge 's ideas were constantly changing ; by 1797 he had finished with Godwinism , and during the time that he was constantly with Wordsworth at Alfoxden , his conversation ( or ‘ monoversation ’ ) was full of references to Hartley , Berkeley and Spinoza .
19 The literature ( especially Macdonald 's 1904 account ) is full of references to women 's " pessimistic and listless " attitude to the fight for higher wages , but as we have already noted , women were often inclined to agree that they were not doing the " full job " , a view in which they were daily fortified by both masters and men .
20 Informal discussions about cases and the more formal case records , were full of references to parents ' ‘ histories ’ , ‘ stability ’ , ‘ maturity ’ , ‘ coping abilities ’ and so on .
21 The privilege of holding a market or fair was extended down the social hierarchy as the Middle Ages progressed , and the royal records are full of references to grants of markets and fairs as the economy developed .
22 To these pieces she applies flourishes of paint in mad swoops of colour — a chair looks as though it has been wrapped in a Mexican Indian blanket , a small table is covered in a riot of pattern , full of references to Memphis — the Milan school and Tennessee .
23 But she thought of how , if the positions had been reversed , she would have written pages full of detail to Ellen , would have described a child in such a way as to make him spring from the writing , alive and visible .
24 Unfortunately , there is no systematic , regular measurement available of attention to TV commercials ( or , indeed , to TV programmes ) , so there is no reliable quantification of the ‘ attention factor ’ , and our knowledge of how it varies by type or audience or time of day ( or any other variable ) is fairly rudimentary .
25 ‘ The superb SVX coupe brings hitherto undreamt of credibility to Subaru
26 The cyclic of rise to power and decay of elites is held by Pareto to be inevitable and is explained by the alteration in elites of the proportions of these residues , both of which are necessary for the maintenance of rule .
27 He followed Sir Isaac Newton as President of the Royal Society and held this office until 1741 , making generous financial contributions , one in particular of importance to botany .
28 The same proved true of references to construction , oil , banking and property .
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