Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] to " in BNC.
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1 | Make the mix fairly dry and press it well down into the joints , filling them right to the top and finishing them flush . |
2 | This is because frictional drag ( from a boot or a ski , say ) melts them locally to a thin film of liquid water . |
3 | From the drawings , he sketched various elevations , then cut them out and transferred them on to the blocks of wood to be bandsawn . |
4 | For a time she became a pony-dealer , buying horses from tinkers and selling them on to English buyers . |
5 | If we move them on to the street , there 'll be more trouble . |
6 | They happen to do something where there is an enormous organization geared up to pushing them on to a pedestal . |
7 | We check the statements , file them and send them on to the band along with our commission invoice . |
8 | The Italian Football Federation has taken note of Maradona 's remarks and will pass them on to Fifa . |
9 | It would have been far better if he 'd done it the other way around — the rest of the set acoustic and then brought them on to play . |
10 | Both men stood aside to let a big dark-green Jaguar edge carefully round them on to the forecourt of the house immediately to the left of where the BMW was parked . |
11 | Spraying the aerosol is the best way to get them on to the enemy , but even this is difficult . |
12 | Republics collect taxes but are refusing to pass them on to the central government . |
13 | She threw them on to the table and looked down at Doyle and Tug . |
14 | She must be re-living her sad memories with such concentration that she was somehow passing them on to him . |
15 | It is pesticide-free and traps male moths by luring them on to a sticky pad with the aid of a sex attractant ( a pheromene lure capsule ) given off by female moths to attract a mate . |
16 | But their real function is to give people a chance to be famous for five minutes , by saying something that will get them on to the next news broadcast . |
17 | He was interested to see Ray 's collection , presented to Samuel Dale just before he died , who later passed them on to Chelsea . |
18 | He passed them on to another colleague who led us finally to our places which were kept for us in the Grand Salon . |
19 | When he can , Kurt then passes them on to me — from an outside phone , of course . |
20 | At one end we should have the ancient Palace of Westminster bringing down our historical associations from the times of the early Saxon kings , and at the other we should have the Palace of Whitehall carrying them on to the revolution … |
21 | The bodymaker passed the doors to the finishers , who in turn passed them on to the french polishers ; the doors then moved along to those whose work it was to hang them in position , the operations being so arranged that the polished door was completed just at the point where it was to be hung on the coach . |
22 | Every station sent in the reports in code and we collected them and sent them on to Bomber Command Headquarters . |
23 | By October , though , these wally wagons had given way to splinter-thin rowing shells in which muscular lads sweated and gasped over their oars while a weedy wimp goaded them on to still greater suffering . |
24 | They went down a narrow lane called Smugglers ' Gully , which led them on to a wild rocky headland . |
25 | What they do n't seem to realise is that we do n't keep spares in the office , so all we can do is send them on to Ablex anyway , so you 'll have longer to wait . |
26 | He and Amy had collected large stones from the beach , looking for those with holes in them — and he had strung them on to strong cord and tied them along one side of the playpen . |
27 | I 'll give them to Elizabeth and she can pass them on to Martha . |
28 | Once licensed , we will collect the royalties due and then pass them on to you . |
29 | She turned from them on to her side . |
30 | The goods always cost more than the mere monetary price ; and it is the object of the system to externalise these costs , by passing them on to the poor or to the impaired resource-base of the earth , and by inviting even the rich to live in collusive dissociation from the costs they , too , must pay . |