Example sentences of "to look forward " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I can get through the rest of the week if I know I 've got comin' here to look forward to . |
2 | But perhaps Mr Kinnock 's most important task next week is to look forward . |
3 | THE TIME has come for the egg industry to look forward to the 1990s . |
4 | The challenge now for the egg industry is to communicate this message to consumers ; to look forward to the 1990s with confidence in the knowledge that its product is the best in the world — not to waste time and money on the constant examination of its collective navel and on cries of ‘ not fair ’ . |
5 | Those kids had nothing to look forward to . |
6 | NEXT MONTH what to look forward to in October |
7 | We have to look forward , not backward . |
8 | He passed Responsions that June and began to look forward to the payments he would get for his journalism — especially for his ‘ prose poems ’ in the Speaker . |
9 | She was beginning to acclimatise to not being alone , to look forward to seeing Christopher : to eating with him , listening to music with him , being silent with him , talking to him , walking with him , occasionally sleeping with him . |
10 | This enabled him to look forward with confidence to continued improvements which would put the British plants back at the top of the performance league , where they used to be , and where they belonged . |
11 | There is always something to look forward to like the unworldly blue flowers of Ceanothus thyrsiflorus and the passion flower which blooms its head off all year . |
12 | Noticing things like that , about Florence Ames , had become usual , something to look forward to almost . |
13 | That would be something to look forward to , the arrival of brochures . |
14 | ‘ With nothing to look forward to ? ’ |
15 | ‘ We 'll have to make things to look forward to , ’ was the quiet reply . |
16 | Those who get hooked have a lifetime of companionship and challenge to look forward to . |
17 | EASTER remains almost the best time for a family gathering ; far less demanding than Christmas , and more cheering , with the rest of spring and summer to look forward to . |
18 | EASTER remains almost the best time for a family gathering ; far less demanding than Christmas , and more cheering , with the rest of spring and summer to look forward to . |
19 | Gamblers who find it infra-dig to do the pools , and now have a national lottery to look forward to . |
20 | Mrs Major , who now has another five years of red boxes in bed and official lunches in Downing Street to look forward to . |
21 | He wrote under the pen-name ‘ Jayemdoubleyou ’ and his reports were something to look forward to every Friday . |
22 | It was something to look forward to while the hours ticked by . |
23 | Her very longevity in office now appeared as a handicap to a party which needed to look forward to the 1990s not back to the battles of the 1980s . |
24 | Winnie grew to look forward to Jenny 's mornings more and more . |
25 | They must , all of them , have something to look forward to at school . |
26 | Something to look forward to . ’ |
27 | Not given to self-pity , he heaved the problem out of his mind and tried to look forward to the challenges of tomorrow , but weariness overtook him and he retired to the shed and his mothy sleeping bag . |
28 | She had come to look forward to the intervals between tenants , for at such times she would sit at the bedroom window that overlooked the street , which sloped swiftly to the main thoroughfare ; and guided by the landmarks of St Dominic 's church and , beyond that , St Ann 's , she could look over the chimney pots and catch a glimpse of the river gleaming between the busy traffic on it . |
29 | After all , our positive friend has so much to look forward to that there is no time to be indisposed . |
30 | Find something to look forward to ; it does not have to be a major event . |