Example sentences of "through to the [adj] [noun] of " in BNC.
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1 | According to Professor Midwinter of University College London , optoelectronics research is instead becoming increasingly focussed on communications and switching applications — from fibre optic cabling through to the internal structure of microchips . |
2 | It 's , it 's no good we going tomorrow or Howard 'll be coming turn out late shift be coming out you know , might as well get ready and going out , now I 've had summat to eat , it 's only quarter to Really we 're starting into the second leaves , the frosts through to the second set of leaves these , that 's gon na be better plant and here when the wind blows |
3 | The Mongolian Party of Free Labour ( MPFL ) and the Mongolian Party of Greens ( MPG ) failed to get any candidates through to the second round of voting . |
4 | At least 12 other women candidates went through to the second round of voting . |
5 | Football , and Oxford United are through to the second round of the Coca-Cola cup . |
6 | It 's 45 years since Cheltenham Town made it through to the second round of the cup . |
7 | IRVINE 's Jim Muir and Hugh Duff , the former Auchinleck man who is now living south of the Border and lining up in England 's colours , won through to the second round of the Midland Bank World Indoor Championship in Preston yesterday as former winners Terry Sullivan and David Bryant tumbled out of the title race . |
8 | Less than a dozen of the official green candidates are now expected even to make it through to the second round of voting next Sunday . |
9 | NICK Jones , from the Wirral , progressed through to the second round of the 1992 Volkswagen Nationals Tennis Championships men 's singles event at the Telford Raquets Centre in Shropshire . |
10 | ‘ Once you start saving yourselves for big games and ducking out of tackles , you get into the wrong frame of mind and that is very dangerous , ’ warned Howard , who is hoping to steer his side through to the second round of the FA Cup for the first time for 17 years . |
11 | ‘ Once you start saving yourselves for big games and ducking out of tackles , you get into the wrong frame of mind and that is very dangerous , ’ warned Howard , who is hoping to steer his side through to the second round of the FA Cup for the first time for 17 years . |
12 | If just a single layer is used it will be stitched through to the outer shell of the bag at intervals and sometimes stitched right through to the lining on cheaper bags . |
13 | Beginning as one of the earliest stone-built castles in the entire country , Chepstow was to be modified and developed in successive stages right through to the Civil War of the Seventeenth century . |
14 | Parting the curtains , he went through to the front half of the room . |
15 | The way in which the police had cleared a way through to the front door of the building at which Mr Brittan was to speak was particularly controversial . |
16 | The book traces his family history leading up to that midnight stroke and carries it through to the dark period of Mrs Gandhi 's emergency . |
17 | COLIN STEPHENS was tackled onto the Stradey Park terraces , and out of the East v West game , as cup holders Llanelli moved through to the fifth round of the SWALEC Cup with a 54-3 win over St Albans . |
18 | In this passage , one may well argue , Paul broke through to the ultimate implications of the Christian message . |
19 | The early careers of The Rolling Stones , and others were littered with blues covers and , as a result , originals , like Hooker 's 1956 Vee-Jay version of ‘ Dimples ’ and Tommy Tucker 's ‘ Hi-Heel Sneakers ’ ( but unfortunately not his recording of ‘ Hey Lawdy Mama , Whose Funky Drawers Are These ? ’ ) filtered through to the upper echelons of the British pop charts . |
20 | Only about one fifth of names submitted make it through to the final roll-call of the main Honours Committee . |
21 | Rex flicked through to the final page of The Suburban Book of the Dead . |
22 | Such a rendition seems broadly typical of von Dohnányi 's rigorous approach to standard orchestral fare , cutting through to the perceived essence of music where the stodge and surface glitter are in fact part and parcel of the intended appeal . |
23 | us through to the first week of September . |
24 | Harold , through to the first quarter-final of his professional career , said : ‘ This is obviously my best ever win , and while Stephen did n't play well I like to think it was something to do with the way I played . ’ |
25 | They 've won their way through to the first round of the FA Cup where they 'll be away to West Bromwich Albion . |
26 | The garden 's main crops of apples and pears are gathered in late September and through to the first weeks of October . |
27 | For , although Clare would never reveal the details of their relationship , and although Mrs Mallory would never tell anyone about their conversation of that afternoon , some hint of his disgrace would inevitably filter through to the other members of the family whom he loved : Mr Mallory , the twins , Patrick , Patricia … |
28 | One after another , men failed in their attempts to drive the nails , usually succeeding in bending them , so I was proud when Dad , using the skill gained over so many years at the anvil , gave his nail an almighty thump sending it through to the other side of the board . |
29 | It 's much easier to get through to the other side of the world than to the other side of London , and the lines are much clearer too . |
30 | The six rooms on the main floor of the Academy will be devoted to : innovations in composition in the second half of the eighteenth century , through to the early work of Cotman and Girtin , with an emphasis on the importance of Alexander Cozens ; topography , spanning the entire chronological period from the Sandby brothers to Lear ; naturalism , including watercolour sketches , observations of nature , still-lifes , animal studies etc. ; later developments in composition ; atmosphere , stressing the ‘ proto-impressionist ’ nature of works by artists such as Cox and Muller ; and lastly the relationship between watercolours and oils and the role of the Old Water-Colour Society in the promotion of the medium as suitable to portray historical and literary subjects . |