Example sentences of "to [art] [noun pl] [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | And the effects have rippled down through the years into just about every local music scene in America , from the blues players to the hillbillies up in the mountains . ’ |
2 | The match got under way and , in our earpieces back in London , we could hear the director talking to the cameramen out in Ballarat . |
3 | Going back to the agents up in the town , the boatmen to get information about a ship coming in they would have to go up to the town |
4 | I think it would be probably worthwhile erm talking to the residents down there , and actually explaining that th what 's happening to them . |
5 | Medals will be awarded to the winning team and individual and to the runners up . |
6 | He went through a brief period of chatting to the customers down at the bank about how he had seen someone come back from the dead . |
7 | By twelve , I had learned how to bargain with the suppliers at Covent Garden while displaying a poker face , later selling the same produce to the customers back in Whitechapel with a grin that stretched from ear to ear . |
8 | It was however hard to speak to the girls out on the streets and so in 1991 a Refuge Centre was opened at Holm Street . |
9 | ‘ I 'm sorry I had to throw old Rex to the wolves back there , ’ he said , without a trace of conviction . |
10 | I want people to be able to listen to the records over and over again and I think for that to happen you have to create a depth of information that 's rock solid . |
11 | It accounts for the constant visits of the apostle to the Gentiles back to the Jerusalem church ( Acts 18:21 , 20:16 , 25:1 etc. ) , and his organisation of a great collection for their benefit , little though he could have approved of their theology ( Rom. 15:26 , I Cor. 16:1 , 2 Cor. 8:1ff ) . |
12 | She had n't been privy to the goings on at the opposite end of the table , but she had a distinct , almost tactile memory of the girl fleeing , the usual calm repose of her features fractured . |
13 | Related to the problems in , in with |
14 | But not to the faces out there , on the wrong side of the lights . |
15 | The reasons for this decentralising movement towards the growth of workplace bargaining activity in Western European countries have been in part economic , as a result of generally high employment and continuous economic growth in the post-war years to the mid-1970s along with a varying capacity to pay of separate employers . |
16 | And when the heavy rain 's heavy er it rises you see , well you 've got to put more power , switch more power on to the machines down below in the station . |
17 | This collection of 10 essays is focussed. according to the editors on , ‘ such dialogue as can exist between the current work of feminists on post-structuralist and post-modernist themes , and the political project of what for shorthand we call ‘ 1970s western feminism ’ . |
18 | Oh well I 'll have to try , try keep going down to the courses down to Toshiba . |
19 | And of course there was a thing we w a lot of the work in the mills was in or Selkirk and of course you went to the early train in the morning , there was a train from Galashiels to and it was full of workers going to the mills in and of course if you going er to work in a mill there , your , your foreman would come , you would draw the tools , at the , the night before you went to the job , you would take them there to the train in the morning , and meet the foreman and you would go to do the job and the same to Selkirk . |
20 | But it was I who got away to the steps up to the morning room , Francis 's sorry steps . |
21 | Disgusted by his own conceit , Maxim drifted out to the steps down to the lawn — the night was still warm enough for the big windows to be open-flanked by two huge , discreetly floodlit magnolia trees . |
22 | The one is in the corridor that goes from the porter 's lodge to the stairs up to . |
23 | And , like I said , I want to know everything you hear , what anyone 's got to say , from the pimps to the tarts through to the doormen at the clip-joints and the managers of restaurants . |
24 | The man in the attic had been dragged through the gaps under the roof to one of the empty houses next door , and from there to the bushes down by the beck where the sound of his coughing would not give him away . |
25 | The last play I worked out that w we had one four hundred and thirty seven of those thirty seven would be er freebies to the homes in , in to bring it down to about four hundred and on the ticket money we took in , I would say about a hundred and twenty of those were erm er concessions . |
26 | He continued nevertheless to act as unpaid organizer and adviser to the Peelites up to 1852 . |
27 | We 'll set fire to the rocks up here and create a huge explosion . |