Example sentences of "[noun] to [noun] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Well , Eleanor divorced King Louis , who preferred religion to women anyway , and married Henry , who then became Duke of Aquitaine through her . |
2 | But all reports of CTL in rodents and humans as well as most pre-erythrocytic vaccine research have focused on sporozoite antigens , particularly CSP , even though CTL to CSP alone appear insufficient for protection against P. falciparum . |
3 | It 's clear that the many non-party political groups which sprang up in the wake of the election , bodies such as Common Cause and Scotland United , are now prepared to work together in a coalition to stage further events highlighting the deficiencies of the current constitutional arrangements . |
4 | I will make that feedback to Jenny so that she 's clear , I think that 's a good way to handle it . |
5 | The targeting of investment to areas rather than people , and the creation of a layer of bureaucracy to ‘ represent ’ such areas , is , in other words , a critical process in the delivery of urban policy initiatives . |
6 | Although the leader of the Union Defence League in succession to Walter Long , he shared Law 's belief in the inevitability of ultimate compromise , and this made him , like Law , an object of suspicion to the diehard Irish Unionists . |
7 | Mr Major has invited the French president to dinner tomorrow in a bid to win his support . |
8 | It is , I think , also of interest to note that section 84 will normally come into play for the benefit of a defendant to action already begun by the local authority in the county court . |
9 | Chamfer the cut edges of pipe to allow easy fitting of the coupling — a few gentle taps with a hammer to chip away the edge is enough . |
10 | TRIPS to Ireland recently have reinforced my view that the P ( probationer ) plate carried by those cars driven by people who have passed their driving test within the last year , are a good thing and should be adopted here . |
11 | ‘ Depardieu junior made more than 15 trips to Holland recently , ’ said a police spokesman . |
12 | It can be a prelude to inquiry just as questions are a spur to searching . |
13 | The potential social and economic costs of AIDS to countries already ravaged by poverty are enormous . |
14 | Intensive livestock methods increase the susceptibility of animals to diseases easily spread by humans , and visitors threaten good farm hygiene ; and the danger can easily be reversed — some farming operations , particularly spraying , threaten visitors . |
15 | Of course , the indifference to time generally attributed to medieval people was not absolute . |
16 | And she she 's primary ed so she 's no good to Jean either . |
17 | Remember I 'm no trollop to while away the hours for you . ’ |
18 | Even a genetic predisposition to psychosis usually has to be ‘ potentiated ’ by one or both of the other causes . |
19 | If there is any predisposition to psychosis then the changes induced can be permanent . |
20 | It is always possible that some ingenious modification of its protective belt will lead to some spectacular discovery that will bring the programme to life again and set it on a progressive phase . |
21 | It also offers users the option to trade up to HP 700/RX stations or to add X terminals to their networks , and is claimed to be the only industry programme to o so . |
22 | The parries in opposition to Government now decided to infiltrate the police and also to influence government servants . |
23 | But the evidence is incontrovertible , and Anselm based his later opposition to homage entirely on the decree of 1099 . |
24 | The opposition to Raybestos then appeared to die down for the following year , only to return with a vengeance in 1980 . |
25 | Both Simon Draper and Ken Berry had been vehement in their opposition to Branson even contemplating rehiring Wilson , and advised him to now tear up the contract and be done with it . |
26 | The Faculty has the advantage of being located in the centre of the Scottish legal system with its own distinctive legal traditions , one of which is an historic openness to influences both from the civilian systems of Europe and the Anglo-American common law . |
27 | Middlesbrough sends its second City Challenge bid to London today . |
28 | I went from Alamein to Tobruk then to Syria . |
29 | There are no concessions to sentimentality either in the 1966 performance of Franck 's D minor Symphony which is coupled with Schumann 's Piano Concerto featuring Annie Fischer as soloist ( ) . |
30 | The reasons for this higher proportion than might be expected demographically are partly ‘ localist ’ ( specialism in an area is a distinct class of subject partition ) , but also because of the strength of indigenous departments in national terms , and the applicability of Scottish research to problems elsewhere . |