Example sentences of "it [adv] to " in BNC.
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1 | Brown will probably be involved in passing it on to other sites as well as to colleagues at the Morgan Grenfell operation . |
2 | Panther claims it will blast the Solo from standstill to 60mph in less than 6.0 seconds and take it on to a top speed in excess of 150mph . |
3 | You use this both to anchor the sledge during a trip , by stamping it into the snow , and at the start of each day to hold the sledge , by clunking it on to a tree trunk . |
4 | Back at Nathan 's sledge he is too cold to be bothered to ride again so we hoist it on to Odd-Knut 's sledge and ride on . |
5 | Well , she need n't put it on to me . |
6 | The commission to design the memorial chapel was first given to G.F. Bodley ( 1827–1907 ) , an eminent church architect of the late-Victorian period , but Bodley passed it on to Comper who had been his most highly talented pupil . |
7 | Because Granby House was a listed building , the contractor eventually became exempt from this tax , but as he could not reclaim any VAT he had already paid to suppliers , he had to pass most of it on to the developer . |
8 | Things happen in these hills that do n't make it on to the evening bulletins . |
9 | Governments will then be hard put to get it on to their national statute books by mid-1993 . |
10 | Many of them pass it on to their wives ; 1% of the women who came for pre-natal tests at the hospital were HIV-positive . |
11 | It is not true I married for a red corduroy jacket belonging to my wife 's father ; but there is no denying he did pass it on to me , as a sort of dowry I believe . |
12 | ‘ I sometimes wonder — no one to hand it on to . |
13 | The next step is to invert the spray container and slide it on to a rack . |
14 | ‘ Our 175hp Ford 6700 goes into the row of grass at 2,600 to 2,800revs , but once you drop it on to the row , the revs soon drop to 2,000 to 2,000rpm . |
15 | One of mankind 's first artistic gestures was to cover his hand with charcoal and press it on to a cave wall : ‘ I , man , was here ! ’ |
16 | He passed it on to the others at their dinner time meeting . |
17 | The solution was simple : he passed it on to his son . |
18 | Then he grabbed a crystal glass eagle that had been presented to Mr Reagan , 81 , raised it above his head and smashed it on to the podium . |
19 | By 1317 the manor had passed from the hands of the de Costentin family into those of the de Caversham family who , in turn , passed it on to the Herberts in 1550 . |
20 | Who will let you build up your own stake in Britain 's success — and pass it on to your children ? |
21 | Shaking the spinnaker out of its bag , he curled it on to the trampoline while checking the cotton lashings that held it rolled . |
22 | He slid the table into the centre of the room , tipping it on to its side , and dragged over the couch with Mariana still on it , so that the furniture formed a fort . |
23 | Ultimately the Marino family surrendered the site to the governor who sold it on to another Milanese businessman , Carlo Omodeo , who did at least allow a member of the Marino family to live in part of it — at an agreed rent . |
24 | I have discussed this with Simon and have passed it on to Paul Ralph for him to gather the components together for you . |
25 | I am sorry not to have replied to your fax sooner but I passed it on to the wrong person for answers to your questions on promo videos . |
26 | Paul the apostle gives us this assurance : ‘ He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus . ’ |
27 | Human selfishness is so real in all of us that it requires no social encouragement , as in the breakdown of marriage , to pass it on to our children . |
28 | I always pray with joy being confident of this , that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus . |
29 | It is now fairly certain that the Australia antigen represents part of the virus responsible for type B hepatitis and its discovery has made it easier to determine the modes of transmission and the presence of a ‘ carrier ’ state , in which the infected person may suffer no ill health from his disease but is still capable of passing it on to others . |
30 | Two waiting men in boiler suits carefully wrapped the corpse inside a canvas swathe , lifted it on to a stretcher , removed it from the room on their way downstairs . |