Example sentences of "[be] a [noun] to [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 He said the closures would be a blow to youngsters in deprived areas .
2 These systems require frequent attention and expense , and even the most up-to-date can be a nuisance to neighbours .
3 It would be a trespass to goods and it would be usurping the owner 's rights , for only he would have any right to do such an act and no one could contend that there was any implied consent or authority to a customer to do any such thing .
4 ‘ The first half will be a tribute to women like Mae West , Doris Day and Madonna .
5 Governments have to govern people , and not only do their policies have a direct impact on the population at large , and are likely to be shaped to some degree by an awareness of what that impact might be , but policies can also be a response to pressures or problems that emerge out of society .
6 There was a period when cyclists disappeared from the Meet altogether but they have started to return in the last few years and among the highlights of this year 's event — May 22–25 — will be a return to races on the old grass cycle track around the perimeter of Richmond Cricket Club 's ground and a road race for penny-farthings .
7 The far world not the The unspiritual world that that we can You see the pride in the eye , that with that that that that can be can be another women or it can it can be cosmetics , it can be a dress to women or it could be another man .
8 Freeze-marking with a number has been proved to be a deterrent to thieves , as well as making it much easier for police to identify animals .
9 Our hope is that this letter will be a warning to others and that some of your readers may be alerted to check on their security arrangements , whether it be simple precautions or advice about a security installation .
10 it would be a commonplace to historians that the union movements in the United States or in Britain are very different in character from the union movements in France or in Italy , each conditioned by its own historical experience , and each with a distinctive conception of its role within the wider society .
11 The information held under the data class of warning signals is intended to indicate individuals who may possess firearms , may possess weapons , may resort to violent behaviour , may attempt to escape , may suffer from mental disorder , may possess explosives , may make false allegations against the police , may be a hazard to others as a carrier of contagious diseases ( e.g. , hepatitis ) ’ —
12 For this reason , these small pieces of yarn can be a hazard to birds and small animals — I have recently found a young bird firmly fastened to a branch by a very short length of yarn ( not mine I hope ! ) .
13 As long as the Government presses on with privatisation there will be a threat to services and a threat of increased fares .
14 But enhanced National Savings rates will be a threat to societies ' cashflows and any upturn in the housing market will exacerbate it .
15 Ryan 's final chapters show that progress in this field will not so much be a threat to novelists , as a potentially rewarding challenge for narratologists .
16 ‘ You can confide in me , ’ said Annie , ‘ it 's what I 'm 'ere for , to be a help to customers .
17 The Football League believes the one-off experiment will be a help to fans — but it could cause problems .
18 I think Cruttenden 's arguments are in many ways convincing , but one must recognise that if intonation is influenced by and reflects the grammar , it follows that it must be a help to listeners in interpreting the grammar of what they hear , and perhaps more importantly , if a speaker 's intonation is inappropriate in relation to the grammar , listeners will find it more difficult to interpret the grammar , and may be confused .
19 This was expected to be a clue to changes in stellar magnetic fields .
20 Brilliant , spontaneous teaching is a rare event , and it would be a disservice to students to abandon planning in the hope that such teaching might happen .
21 It should not be a shock to others either , for this is an action replay of Gower versus Stewart , the clash of cavalier and roundhead , flair and commitment .
22 Sometimes , sniffing may be a reaction to problems in the family .
23 Franks contended it was undesirable in principle that the appointment of so many chairmen and members of individual tribunals should rest with the departmental Ministers concerned , when it was their own departments which frequently would be a party to proceedings before a tribunal .
24 The application must be against someone who is likely to be a party to proceedings but this can extend to cases where even the bringing of these proceedings depends on what is in the documents ( Dunning v United Liverpool Hospitals ' Board of Governors [ 1973 ] 2 All ER 454 ) .
25 ( d ) Termination of party status Any person may ask the court to order that he or another person cease to be a party to proceedings ( FPCR , r7(2) ; FPR , r4.7(2) ) .
26 The extra width available will be a boon to photographers looking for a rich textured background for full sized studio work .
27 George said : ‘ I think this should be a lesson to directors who give themselves massive pay rises .
28 It spent a third of a million pounds on this flare siphoning off dangerous methane gas — and has these Nigerian Lanner Falcons on constant guard against flocks of seagulls which can be a danger to planes from nearby RAF bases .
29 As long as I refuse to recognize my part in the fallenness of the world around me , I will never be a blessing to others .
30 The second is that if , following the Francovich case , there was held to be a right to damages in such circumstances , the effect of requiring an undertaking from the council would be to impose liability in damages on the council instead of on the United Kingdom which , as I understand the position , would properly be the party so liable .
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