Example sentences of "[noun] to [art] " in BNC.
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1 | His nervous tension , allied to the freezing cold , combined to fill his bladder to the point where it became decidedly uncomfortable . |
2 | There are yet more clues in Marx 's exposition of the autonomous state in the France of Louis Napoleon to the power of bureaucracy in the post-colonial situation . |
3 | Presents from returning travellers or presents for your hostess are as much a sign of manners to the hareem as they are to us . |
4 | The standard deviation can usefully be visualized as the distance from the mean to the point of inflection of the bell-shaped curve . |
5 | The standard deviation can usefully be visualized as the distance from the mean to the point of inflection of the bell-shaped curve . |
6 | Chain your steering wheel to the clutch , brake pedal or a seat . |
7 | When he judged the moment was right — that he could turn the Mercedes faster than the truck driver could alter the onward rush of his mammoth — he swung the wheel to the left , switching to the outer lane . |
8 | The rider does n't just lean the bike into the corner — he knocks the machine on to its side , pushing heavily on the right handlebar to turn the front wheel to the left and drop the machine to the right . |
9 | With his other arm he wrenched the wheel to the right , forced the Audi on to the pavement and against the wall . |
10 | Dyson swung the wheel to the left , then swung it sharply to the right again to avoid a lorry which was overtaking him on the inside . |
11 | ‘ You took the Wheel to the site and set it up on the ramp ; was it left unattended at any time ? ’ |
12 | She slowly forced the wheel to the left and the car moved on to the hard shoulder and stopped . |
13 | When the retired to Peebles they donated the wheel to the Museum . |
14 | The mare shied violently , jumping with a sudden jerk to the left with such force that Lucy 's boots slid from the stirrups and she was thrown to the ground . |
15 | Papyrus enabled the ancients to spread their religion to a wider audience . |
16 | He was also a key factor in transplanting New England religion to the newer Northern states , especially Ohio . |
17 | The rare reprints of Bernard Shaw 's and G.K. Chesterton 's addresses on The Future of Religion to the Cambridge Heretics Society in 1911 . |
18 | Whatever the personal beliefs of the worker , the meaning of religion to the client should be noted , and efforts made to facilitate whatever religious expression is helpful . |
19 | This is the main appeal of religion to the vast majority of believers , who may or may not have the ‘ oceanic ’ feeling of the more mystically inclined . |
20 | Women are disrupted in their worship by the masculinity of the religion to the point that it ceases to be for them a vehicle through which they can love God . |
21 | By uncovering the contribution made by ‘ serious ’ religion to the wider Ulster society by c1900 this study will make more comprehensible many neglected aspects of life and custom in the twentieth-century Ulster . |
22 | Lesley turned smartly left as the lights changed , and wound her way by back-streets to the parking-ground on the edge of the shopping centre , a multi-storey monstrosity of raw concrete , at which she gazed with resigned distaste as she crept slowly up to the barrier and drove in to the second tier . |
23 | For each of us , keeping our risks to a minimum is dependent on what we do and not how we identify ourselves . |
24 | They may , of course , be wrong , and will then lose money , but market research is supposed to reduce the financial risks to a minimum . |
25 | Such common risks to the interests and values they all share still give the allies plenty to fret about collectively . |
26 | They are not foolproof ; they carry additional risks to the health of the child ; and are capable of detecting only certain types of handicap , at present mainly chromosomal disorders and malformations of the central nervous system which give rise to spina bifida ( now largely a physical rather than mental handicap ) and hydrocephalus . |
27 | This is not only because of the risks to the health of the attempters and the distress to families and friends , but also because of the implications for the health services in terms of use of limited resources . |
28 | In addition , derelict land was , until recently , being created faster than it could be reclaimed , Although there are areas of derelict land that should be retained for some of the reasons given by John Gordon , and research sponsored by the Department of the Environment has sought to identify these for appropriate use , there are still far larger areas that , due to the many constraints of the substrates that need to be overcome , are eyesores , health hazards and potential lethal risks to the communities that have to live surrounded by them . |
29 | In particular , it is important that the reasons for continuing a difficult diet ( which includes expensive phenylalanine free protein substitute and other special food products , biochemical monitoring , and experienced dietetic advice ) are clearly understood in terms of the neurological risks to the patient . |
30 | Risks to the fetus increase slightly after 42 weeks ’ gestation but women having labour induced are more likely to have instrumental deliveries or babies with low Apgar scores . |