Example sentences of "[noun] to [noun] [prep] [adv] the " in BNC.

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1 The need to check if , and how fully , an authority will meet the cost in such cases is outlined by the Department of Health in guidelines to authorities on how the NHS market will work .
2 ‘ is in a position to take steps under a programme arranged between the Canadian government and both Canadian national airlines for the provision of return air transportation to Canada for both the child and an accompanying adult .
3 The justification for applying this Figure to Mercury with roughly the same time scales will be made in Chapter 8 .
4 By raising the awareness of returning nurses and health visitors of such important issues as professional accountability , new approaches to the learning process and the learning environment , the implications of research based care and the impact of new technologies in nursing , I hope that the book will help to facilitate a safe and knowledgeable return to practice for both the individual returner and her employer .
5 The opening phase of the war , however , produced domestic difficulties and grievances not dissimilar to those experienced by Edward 's father and grandfather ; and it was only with the military successes and material gains of the 1340s that a change in attitude to war amongst both the nobility and the commons became apparent .
6 ‘ I had the impression that you did n't see eye to eye on how the club should be run . ’
7 As outpatient clinics developed in local general hospitals , GPs started to refer patients to consultants in exactly the same way as they did for other medical specialties .
8 The principal claim to greatness of even the popes themselves , before the mid-eleventh century , lay in their conduct as bishops of Rome , building churches , organizing poor relief , and resisting the attempts of every tinpot contender for the empire to dominate the city and its people .
9 Jansons masterfully keeps the music 's internal momentum alive without any sense of undue haste , and although the allegro bustles energetically along , Jansons resists the temptation to tear Shostakovich 's occasionally violent texturing to shreds For once the Finale appears as a crowning inevitability , rather than merely a throw-away moto-perpetuo of staccato virtuosity .
10 In Ireland , Easons repeated its Diamond Collection catalogue , which it distributed through its wholesale division to booksellers in both the Republic and Northern Ireland .
11 The chroniclers report the campaigns in muted terms , and give little impression of a will to war amongst either the nobility or the community generally .
12 Perhaps a certain sensitivity on this question inspired his particularly detailed instructions to Orjonikidze on how the Georgians were to be treated ; the intelligentsia were to be offered particular concessions , and the Mensheviks to be invited to participate — ‘ avoid any mechanism copying the Russian pattern … bigger concessions to all the petty bourgeois elements ’ .
13 With a much smaller baseload of night traffic it was no longer viable to retain separate services to Scotland on both the East and West Coast routes .
14 The department offers a full range of courses , from those for beginners ( including a non-graduating Italian Language half-course , of particular interest to students from outside the Faculty of Arts ) to advanced courses in language , the literature and history of all periods and other aspects of Italian culture , such as cinema .
15 Lesbian and Gay-Men 's Sub-Committees were set up in such a way as to give a high level of representation to people from outside the council 's structure , and to ensure that their voices could be heard .
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