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

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1 All attempts to engineer a dialogue between the two have so far come to nothing , whether through UN Security Council resolutions in a sequel to the bilateral Camp David peace between Israel and Egypt in 1978 , or through attempts to associate the PLO leadership with either Jordan or Egypt in the direct talks between them and the Israelis from which the latter have always recoiled .
2 A legend was afterwards believed that William Temple converted Ramsey in a mission to the university in February 1926 .
3 When it 's done I hope to interest the Church in a mission to the gipsies . ’
4 ‘ I did n't think I was speculating ’ she said in a rebuke to the Government 's attitude towards the advertised high-return , low-risk investment offered by Barlow Clowes .
5 Indeed , just before his interview with Meese , he had dropped in to see McFarlane in his office precisely , McFarlane thought , to agonize over the fact that the diversion was a matter of record : ‘ I put it in a memo to the Admiral . ’
6 On April 21st , he was sent back to his corps in the Argonne by Knobelsdorf , but before departing he gave vent to his doubts in a memo to the Crown Prince .
7 ‘ A trio of heroes set out in winter to save the land in a quest to the north .
8 Until quite recently , most music publishing agreements assigned all rights in a song to the publisher for this full copyright term .
9 But the usefulness which he sought was not only that of a prominent poet , and in a postscript to The Idea of a Christian Society he had already discussed the need for " constructive thinking " during the war .
10 Extracts from the Annual Report of the Chief Medical Officer of the Ministry of Health were sent in a circular to the Committee ; each area was to aim at providing as effective and complete a service as was practicable .
11 In a return to the Latin origin of the word , ‘ textuality ’ weaves everything together .
12 For instance , finality is felt in a return to the tonic , accompanied by tonic harmony , while temporary repose or the need for continuity is implied if the melody rests on another note with ( inevitably ) harmony which is not tonic harmony .
13 In a return to the established tradition , the 1992 annual RIBA Awards Presentation was held at Portland Place and this year coincided with the opening of the RIBA National Awards Exhibition in the RIBA Gallery .
14 That would result in a return to the period when 29 million days were lost to strikes and when substantial burdens were imposed on British industry .
15 In a return to the system of price controls which had been abandoned in 1990 , sector-wide increases would be decided by union , business and government representatives .
16 There was a real fear that an amendment which satisfied developers would seriously weaken or even wreck the planning machine ; the scheme was part of a complex of planning controls which might easily be upset and result in a return to the very problems which the 1947 Act was designed to solve .
17 The monster document , nearly two-and-a-half miles long , was drawn in a waggon to the House of Commons by cadets from the Clapham training home .
18 A MAJOR step in the development of the game in the ranks of the Services took place at St Helens on Sunday , when , in a curtain-raiser to the first match of the New Zealand tour , an RAF team defeated an Army XIII by 22-14 .
19 FORMER Redcar and West Hartlepool winger Rob Bryce is in the England under 21 team to face the French Armed Forces in a curtain-raiser to the Pilkington Cup final at Twickenham on May 2 .
20 In a foreword to the 1979 Conservative election manifesto , Mrs Thatcher suggested that the election might be the last chance voters had to reverse the extension of state power at the expense of the individual .
21 However , in a foreword to the report , Lady Howe , the campaign 's chairman , stresses that the initiative is a long-term one and that it is only beginning to get underway .
22 In a preface to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn , published in this year , he described the landscape of his childhood and speculated about the boy who remained within the adult and successful figure of Mark Twain — the boy who was called " Huck " and whom Eliot saw as a symbol of freedom like the Mississippi itself ; it was impossible for that boy r that river " to have a beginning or end — a career " .
23 In a preface to the manual , the CEC 's director general for energy , said , ‘ It addresses innovations of great interest and importance to the international oil industry .
24 The knife clattered to the floor , and he threw in a right-hook to the jaw that sent the man reeling back against the counter , gasping , ‘ Pick it up , Mike — quick ! ’
25 A battery of guns stood at the edge of the village , some cavalry horses stood unsaddled in the street beyond , and a battalion of infantry was bivouacked in a field to the right of the guns , but otherwise the enemy was hidden , and so Sharpe stuck with his earlier estimate .
26 John Craddock who feels he 'd have to leave his home of twenty-five years because of the noise if the north Oxford bypass went aheadsums up the feelings of many in a plea to the government on its transport policy :
27 The warning came in a plea to the Ministry of Defence by the Killin mountain rescue team in Perthshire , who also predict that axing the Leuchars facility will increased the workload and danger for mountain rescue volunteers .
28 Then Stephen beat off two defenders in a run to the line and Dave Groves met the resulting cross with a diving header which was cleared in the goalmouth .
29 Niknam at once put in a call to the Interior Ministry in Teheran and was monitored passing on Lovejoy 's information .
30 But first … ’ she paused in mid-stride , looking back enquiringly , ‘ you 'd better put in a call to the police . ’
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