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

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1 Their anxiety may be displaced on to the actual ceremony , making the responses correctly , being the centre of attention , or on to details of the reception or party to be held afterwards .
2 They make the 2600 kilometre trip regularly , transporting the GSi Astras from their base near Dungannon to GM Spain 's headquarters in Madrid and on to events throughout the country — even as far as the Canary Islands .
3 Marshall ( 1987 ) follows Mandel ( 1975 ) in relating long waves to major shifts in the wider economy , and especially to movements in the rate of profit , but goes beyond Mandel in trying to make the theory less deterministic .
4 A Word Child ( 1975 ) , indeed , is so specific in its references to places , and especially to places on the London Underground , that the narrator remarks he was once tempted to call his story the Inner Circle ; and Martin Amis 's London Fields ( 1989 ) is almost as detailed about Notting Hill as if it were a guide-book .
5 Accountability must flow downwards and outwards to users of the service , as well as upwards to councillors and ministers .
6 The defence applies only to retailers and not to others in the distribution chain who can rely upon another defence of general application under s39 , namely , " due diligence " .
7 Its conclusion is that there are no mistakes whatever in it , and , if any apparent mistakes are found , this must be due to our interpretation and not to problems in the text .
8 That has inspired fears over potential damage to the occupants ' ears due to the sudden pressure change within European saloons which tend to be smaller than those in the US , and also to worries about the ability to control the car in the unlikely event that the bag deploys accidentally .
9 By using the marketing mix as a tactical tool of an organization 's marketing plans , it is possible to adapt speedily and profitably to changes in the marketing environment .
10 and almost to blows on the Bridge of Hell
11 This mode of analysis requires us to look beyond ‘ forms of regime ’ ( Poulantzas 1973 , p. 153 ) such as constitutional monarchy , parliamentary republic , presidential government or parliamentary democracy , to forms of state , such as liberal or interventionist , and beyond to stages in the development of capitalism or , historically , to the transition from one mode of production to another .
12 A constant feature of most appraisals took the form of a circling sequence of perceptions and responses , returning again and again to aspects of the work that had already been considered .
13 He attributes these changes , however , not so much to the positive or negative measures of successive governments , but rather to changes in the total supply of doctors .
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