Example sentences of "[to-vb] again to " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It was naturally tempting for a rather superstitious man to trust again to an intuitive judgment of his own made in much the same circumstances as in the previous year . |
2 | After a terrible 15 minutes I managed to talk again to the same doctor and she explained that elevated meant they were not nought , not as I had thought , that they were going up . |
3 | Both views , of course , are distortions and we need to listen again to what the other is really trying to say . |
4 | I ran the tape back , wanting to listen again to some of Surkov 's improvisation ; but when I pressed to start it there was only a crackling silence . |
5 | Minutes later McCluskey supplied the final pass to launch centre Alan Hunter in for a second Portadown try at the posts , leaving Brown to convert again to finally kill off Armagh 's stubborn challenge . |
6 | It is useful to refer again to the practice guides which the then ABAFA produced to the 1975 Children Act ( 1976 and 1977 ) ( and which were criticised by Tunstill ) . |
7 | To refer again to the rise in interest rates in 1988 , the cost of personal and business borrowing is approaching levels which in real terms ( after taking away the effects of inflation ) are high . |
8 | Chairman , er if I might I was going to refer again to the care carefully worded recommendation which does n't actually mention the level of erm it simply mentions erm er a modest extent of under provision because clearly it says elsewhere in the report at two ten that it 's not yet known whether there will be opportunities elsewhere , so that 's a particular shortfall in provision to be made up . |
9 | In the 1950s and 60s , when Britain itself needed workers , it seemed obvious to turn again to the vast army of labour which waited in the colonies and ex-colonies , and whose situation itself had been created by colonialism . |
10 | It is important to turn again to feminist involvement here . |
11 | It may help me more indirectly by alerting me to the fact that I may be wrong , and forcing me to reason again to double check my conclusion . |
12 | The Senior League looks certain to go again to Belfast Ladies who are four points clear of Pegasus . |
13 | The number of improvement grants approved in England and Wales rose sharply from 156,000 in 1970 to a record 360,000 in 1973 , to fall again to 231,000 in 1974 and decline thereafter . |
14 | The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August pushed prices up to $413 an ounce although peace initiatives at the end of August [ see p. 37695 ] caused them to fall again to around $382 an ounce . |
15 | To control the elaborate complex of facets or planes to which forms are now reduced , Picasso had to resort again to the use of a consistent light source , and there is in many of these paintings a new and strong sense of chiaroscuro . |
16 | With the unparalleled luxury of the lodges and the delights of a Highland weekend fresh in your mind , perhaps as you prepare to depart , you 'll make a secret promise to return again to this special hideaway … as the proud ‘ LAIRD ’ of your own magnificent Highland home . |
17 | The Colonel had no need to pressure him to return again to Baghdad after his mission was completed , and after he had visited his mother who was dying . |
18 | To return again to the beginning , a circumstance ( 1 ) consists of items required for the effect . |
19 | To return again to the earlier period , however , one finds that once the was enrolled he waited his turn until a post fell vacant . |
20 | The government 's North Sea oil take is depressed at present but will be on a rising trend as production begins to rise again to its 1985 peak and could account for more than a third of public spending . |
21 | It says that sales of meat have remained constant during the past 20 years , standing at 64.2 kg a head per year in 1970 , dipping slightly to 63.4 kg in 1980 , only to rise again to 65.4 kg in 1990 . |
22 | Only James Callaghan , reshuffled after devaluation in 1967 , retained enough dignity to rise again to the top . |
23 | World War II had a disastrous effect and tonnages were never to rise again to the levels of earlier years . |