Example sentences of "[to-vb] [noun] [prep] [adv] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | But Richard Wilson says he regrets the fact that units like the Ritchie Russell have to find money from outside the NHS . |
2 | This has long been recognised , and the courts have tended to construe indemnities in much the same way as exclusion clauses : thus an indemnity will be construed strictly contra proferentem ( Canada Steamship Lines v R [ 1952 ] AC 192 ; Smith v S Wales Switchgear Ltd [ 1978 ] 1 All ER 165 ) . |
3 | Chairman Roland Williams announced a competition for the best '40s-style stand to help broaden the interest of the event for a family day out and to attract people from outside the farming community . |
4 | Chairman Roland Williams announced a competition for the best 40 's style stand to help broaden the interest of the event for a family day out and to attract people from outside the farming community . |
5 | Patients will no longer have to travel to Darlington and York for treatment and the new facilities are expected to attract people from outside the area . |
6 | He called for the inquiry to accept submissions from outside the service , for the final report to be published in full and for more resources to be provided if the report said they were needed . |
7 | The only serious flaw is his use of BASIC to provide examples of how a programming language works . |
8 | The focus on large firms ( and not just textile ones ) is designed to discover clues about how the whole region responded to the threat of industrial decline . |
9 | Tshisekedi had refused to accept ministers from outside the national conference . |
10 | During the S the CNES budget increased substantially — largely due to state support for both the national and European ( ESA ) programmes : the CNES budget ( in real terms ) trebled in the years 1963–8 and then stayed level during most of the S ; in the S it rose steadily . |
11 | The Edinburgh team , missing Tony Hand with an injured wrist , could now fail to reach Wembley for only the second time in nine years . |
12 | Argentina 's government failed to arrest inflation for much the same reason . |
13 | A new highly flexible manufacturing line employing leading production technology has been completed at our main plant in Wayne , PA , increasing our capacity to serve customers in both the US and Japan . |
14 | A study by Moxon ( 1999 : 15 ) shows that as many as two-fifths of those whose offences involved less than £200 received unsuspended custody ( largely as a result of past offending or being in breach of an existing court order ) in spite of the persistent concern in recent years about the need to restrict custody to only the most serious property offenders . |
15 | So far we have been talking about the flow of information from the company , but It can be equally important for management to receive information on how the world is thinking about the company and its activities , about rival companies and about the industry in which it operates . |
16 | He chose his first Whitsunday as pope to announce details of how the Ante-preparatory Commission would be organized . |
17 | The fundamental difference between them is that the PC was designed as a text and number processing system and , despite upgrades , this is still the case while the Macintosh was designed to handle graphics in exactly the same way as text . |
18 | The core policies of Reaganomics were to free the incomes of the rich through fiscal munificence while squeezing welfare payments to encourage the poor to find work ; to stimulate speculation in almost every imaginable commodity , in deference to the mystique of the fast buck ; to build up defence spending , but cut almost everything else . |
19 | Murrayfield Racers , with just a point from three games , appear destined to miss Wembley for only the second time in nine years , but were unlucky to lose 5-4 at Durham . |
20 | None the less , Fabry-Perot experiments seem to give rise to broadly the same sorts of instability as those predicted from ring cavity analyses . |
21 | It is not for the circumstance to give rise to something or other , but for it to give rise to just the effect . |
22 | It 's worthwhile to give certificates on almost every conceivable occasion . |
23 | Bhutto denied the charges , although she refused to give details of how the funds were spent , saying that " such disclosure would not be in the national interest " . |
24 | Teacher Gender : The sample of teachers in this study , two male and two female , is too small to draw conclusions about how the gender of the teacher affects bias in transactions with pupils . |
25 | In Spanish tradition , I rested when I wanted to on the bolts , 700 feet above ground , and with a little planning it was possible to use jugs for almost every move . |
26 | No doubt when the subsidy commissioners came on the scene they were prevailed on to restore assessments to approximately the levels of 1515 . |
27 | Your knowledge of the issues and your diligence in pursuing them to ensure protection of both the built and natural environments , is greatly admired and appreciated by us all . |
28 | Even then , Jobs predicts , illegal copies will circulate , but computer companies will be able to cost piracy in much the same way as shops cost shoplifting — as part of their business plans . |
29 | It follows that the parties ' legal advisors will require to study Hansard in practically every such case to see whether or not there is any help to be gained from it . |
30 | The children loved the hectic activity of the day , and it was difficult to keep track of where the boys were at any one time . |