Example sentences of "[prep] [pers pn] from [noun sg] to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Indeed my wife believes that if when I die I am cut in half , the letters ICI will be found stamped through me from top to bottom , like Blackpool rock .
2 ‘ This course is made for me from tee to green but I 've got a lot to learn on the greens , ’ he said .
3 He said : ‘ When your brother Maurice 's wife was ill and David was an infant I understand you looked after him from time to time . ’
4 Erm , mainly out of perversity , I do admit , because I must be the only social scientist of my generation who 's read all of them from cover to cover .
5 It is a real link , not just a ‘ we 'll be thinking of you from time to time ’ relationship .
6 WML is a real link not just a ‘ we 'll be thinking of you from time to time ’ .
7 Sir Philip Egerton having been kind enough to give me a Frank I embrace the opportunity to send you some account of Mr. Gould and his movements , presuming that as you expressed a wish to hear of him from time to time , a letter on this subject might not be devoid of interest .
8 The audience can pick up the dramatic thread running through the cadenza and make sense of it from beginning to end . ’
9 The routine of the annexe on Friday after school was disturbed by Mr Crumwallis making ineffectual invasions of it from time to time .
10 Much of it is a matter of planning and approach , and most of us from time to time talk with colleagues and seek advice from older and perhaps wiser hands .
11 I could repeat the catechism for you from beginnin' to end , and chunks of the Bible .
12 This column has been set aside for the punchcard machines , but I 'm not forgetting that some of you have manual machines and I hope in future issues in to include something for you from time to time .
13 His arm lay against hers from shoulder to elbow and there was nothing they could do about it .
14 Well they keep complaining about the refectory food so they come over here and have mutton stew with me from time to time , and they I quite like their company .
15 For three years now , I 've carried this pack with me from place to place — a penance , a mortification , a burden that weighed as heavy as sin — thinking never again to open it , never again to be asked to take out my chisel or swing my mallet .
16 With 23 branches throughout the United Kingdom , and more being established , the Institute offers members the opportunity to discuss export subjects with other experienced practitioners and to enjoy social functions with them from time to time .
17 She lived with the child and her father stayed with them from time to time in the flat on the north side of Glasgow .
18 I know Mother traded with him from time to time , and once sent a quantity of wool away to another mill and had some back as grey blankets .
19 Kate did not seem to play a great part in her husband 's political life : she appeared on platforms with him from time to time , but she was by no means an automatic member of his entourage .
20 Eating out will be the most difficult for the first two stages , but you can certainly get away with it from time to time .
21 Atomism , opposed to holism , holds that each sentence has its own meaning , which it can carry about with it from theory to theory .
22 He has read it before but he dips into it from time to time as a priest might consult the Bible in preparation for a sermon , or a poisoner Feltman 's Toxicology in preparation for a murder .
23 faced with a line of print there is one tendency to fixate near the beginning of the line and another to move the eye along it from left to right .
24 ‘ We can never dismiss yesterday as though it never happened , because we carry it with us from moment to moment until the end of our days . ’
25 It is inevitable that one or more of these sub-groups will be disappointed in me from time to time and I will be disappointed in them .
26 Everyone , I think , is vulnerable to the guest , or guests that descend upon you from time to time .
27 Mr Noel Stock , who speaks as one who had Pound 's confidence in recent years and was in daily contact with him , explains that this passage derives from a hint thrown out by Jessie L. Weston in her from Ritual to Romance , to the effect that the charges of heresy brought against the Templars were not wholly unfounded , since some of the practices of the Eleusinian mystery-cults from the pagan Near East survived in the heart of Christendom in the rituals of the Templars , a survival to be traced in literature in the stories and poems about the quest of the holy grail .
28 She spread her legs a little wider , as his mouth feasted upon her from arsehole to clitoris , slobbering over her saturated crotch .
29 The idea was to put him in it from time to time to give his gammy leg a rest .
30 Suddenly a coughing fit seized him and a stab of agony lanced through him from back to front .
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