Example sentences of "[conj] [noun prp] give to " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The title ‘ administrative criminology ’ is of significance in that it is the title that Vold gave to the classical criminology of Beccaria and Bentham ( as we saw in Chapter 1 ) .
2 A somewhat different tone began to emerge relatively quickly , particularly in an address that Gorbachev gave to British members of parliament later the same month .
3 His conversation had the inconsequence that Chekhov gave to his older characters and it was larded with Russian proverbs , many of which he was suspected of having invented himself .
4 No one can fault the absolute loyalty that Willie gave to Ted and then Margaret .
5 ‘ This is a promise that God gave to Abraham , ’ North said Reagan had told him , in the slightly hectoring tone he always had in the North dreams ; ‘ Who am I to say that we should not do this ? ’
6 We have freedom to enjoy the space that God gives to us in his family .
7 Peter Wagner defines the gift of the evangelist as ‘ the special ability that God gives to certain members of the Body of Christ to share the gospel with unbelievers in such a way that men and women become Jesus ’ disciples and responsible members of the Body of Christ ’ ( Wagner 1979b:173 ) .
8 The gift is the faith that God gives to us to receive his forgiveness and his salvation , and his grace as provided .
9 This er , although it 's not on your reading list , erm , the reading list that Bob gave to you , er , it , it should be .
10 If his work has an image inside itself , it is I think the horn that Éomer gives to Merry , only a small one , but one from the hoard of Scatha the Worm and brought from the North by Eorl the Young .
11 A later ( later in terms of the Quarto numbering , that is ) example of this type of sonnet , with its disgusted ‘ withdrawal of the Poet ’ gesture , is 95 : The exclamatory style , the notably affectionate gestures , the epithets of praise ( ‘ sweet and lovely ’ , ‘ sweets ’ , ‘ beauty 's veil ’ in line 11 ) almost convince us that the Friend 's personal attractiveness can somehow transmute evil to good , a form of paradoxical hyperbole that Shakespeare gives to Lepidus , attempting to excuse Antony 's faults to Caesar : ‘ His faults in him seem as the spots of heaven , /More fiery by night 's blackness ’ ( Antony and Cleopatra , I.iv.13f ) .
12 And Thorfinn gave to them his considered answers , as ever .
13 Similarly , Cnut and Emma gave to Abingdon a reliquary for the remains of St Vincent which bore upon it the inscription " King Cnut and Queen Ælfgifu commanded the making of this reliquary from 230 gold mancuses , refined by fire , and two pounds of silver of great weight " .
14 I hope you 're not going to give me as much trouble as Puck gave to the lovers in the play , ’ Lucenzo murmured , a sliver of steel-tipped menace in his tone .
  Next page