Example sentences of "[prep] [be] [verb] [adv prt] to the " in BNC.

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1 and then it 'll be till Tuesday he 's already got some even though they got ta be sent out to the firm
2 There is jurisdiction for actions valued at less than £50,000 to be transferred up to the High Court under ss41(1) or 42(2) of the County Courts Act 1984 , although such transfers are likely to occur only in exceptional cases raising questions of general public interest .
3 Despite a statement by Selwyn Lloyd , the Foreign Secretary , in the House of Commons on 23rd July that there was ‘ no question of large-scale operations by British troops on the ground ’ , Army units had to be flown up to the Oman from Kenya to support the Sultan 's armed forces in crushing the rebellion .
4 The critical questions have to be turned on to the discipline and relevant examples furnished from within the discipline .
5 She did n't want to be escorted back to the apartment by him .
6 ‘ Now I really ought to be getting back to the apartment . ’
7 As for the civil service , it had to be cut down to the lowest level necessary .
8 ‘ The Archbishop seems to be harking back to the politics of guilt and the socialist faddism of yesteryear . ’
9 Blood sugar needs to be kept up to the correct level in order to allow both body and mind to function correctly , and the body is very clever at informing us of its requirements .
10 Emma allowed herself to be led over to the sofa .
11 Lady Selvedge allowed herself to be led on to the platform and was introduced in a short speech by Mark , who found himself unable to think of very much to say about her , confused as he was by the talk of ‘ high principles ’ , cocktail parties , and her former husband 's misdeeds which he remembered having with Sophia and Penelope .
12 Marr ( 1982 ) describes many processes that have yet to be mapped on to the nervous system .
13 As Francis Bacon , the patron saint of the scientific method , wrote four centuries ago , ‘ The Universe is not to be narrowed down to the limits of our understanding — rather the understanding must be stretched and enlarged to take in the image of the Universe as it is discovered . ’
14 A command which causes lines of the current program to be listed out to the screen with the automatic formatting options specified by LISTO .
15 Continuity and progression have to be built in to the programme and there has to be scope for differentiation and extension .
16 That level of contact must certainly be maintained in future under the Commission , and I would expect the national coaches to be co-opted on to the Commission itself as non-voting members . ’
17 It also fulfils a role as a vehicle for enabling Scottish views to be channelled back to the decision makers in Europe .
18 Do not turn up with an extra child to be fitted in to the same appointment .
19 If you do not want to lose the patterns currently in the knitting machine , you can upload them to DesignaKnit and save them on to disk , ready to be downloaded back to the knitting machine when required .
20 Kate had been half aware that the TV cameras were around , but she 'd hardly expected their wedding to be tacked on to the end of the nine o'clock news .
21 It seemed to be given up to the birds and their morning hymns …
22 The Black Man of Saxony , playing grisly tunes so that the children would follow him to his terrible mountain lair , there to be given up to the Man of the Mountains .
23 Sitting next to Alison 's fiance , Gordon Healis , Mr Manwaring said : ‘ The streets have got to be given back to the police and the decent people of this country . ’
24 When he eventually embarked to be rowed out to the ship , ‘ it blew up just before he reached her , it appears that , if he had left the shore a few minutes sooner , he must have perished with the rest on board ’
25 What started out as fresh , clean white wine made from Aligoté or Rkatziteli grapes in Georgia or Moldavia had to be tankered up to the capital for bottling .
26 Double-breasted to be fastened up to the collar , or left open , the reefer quickly ceased to be only navy blue and became a double-breasted tweed ‘ casual ’ coat , a direct ancestor o f the modern double-breasted suit .
27 By mutual consent they had n't eaten out , Ace arranging for meals to be sent up to the apartment from the Italian restaurant next door .
28 A sample of urine is usually needed either for simple testing in the clinic or to be sent off to the laboratory for more sophisticated tests .
29 Most staff return to the area office in mid-afternoon with samples to be sent off to the laboratory .
30 It has to be sent off to the Department of Health on the fourteenth of this month .
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