Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [verb] [adv prt] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 Very soon , they eat enough to pass on to the next stage of their life cycle .
2 Thomson 's free kick Pearce gets it clear and then won back by Hill but has only gone back to the Forest skipper .
3 So at the end of their dancing career many tried desperately to hang on to the fringes of the theatre world as did matron Daisy Woodworth .
4 MRS Thatcher 's friends tell me that she has finally come around to the idea of going to the Lords after the election .
5 After years of anticipation , the Taiwanese-backed NuTek USA Corp in Cupertino , California has finally come down to the wire with its Macintosh-compatible technology : the company claims that it has developed the first machine that emulates the Macintosh without requiring installation of Apple Computer Inc 's proprietary ROMs .
6 There are others who are n't even dancing : one who has just gone over to the veranda and plunged his hand into the vat of boiling oil so he could offer a hot puri to a child in tears : another who is standing in the midst of the dancers being continually buffeted as they come and go , and hungrily eating a plateful of raw rice grains .
7 ( In good humour he has already turned back to the mime : the two SPIES awaiting execution at the hands of the PLAYER ) Audiences know what to expect , and that is all that they are prepared to believe in .
8 Colour Sergeant Skuse has already driven down to the Soviet Checkpoint , one kilometre away in East Germany , to warn the Russians that a British military convoy is expected to enter the city .
9 ‘ In my 35 years of dealing this is the greatest sculpture that has ever come on to the market , ’ he said .
10 Since then broadcasting has gradually opened up to the continuing debate over the place of homosexuality in British society , albeit confining it to a number of fairly distinct genres of drama and factual television .
11 Since they are both high-class batsmen this comes as quite a surprise , but looking through the records one sees that one of them has failed fairly often ; their strength is that when that has happened the other has usually gone on to a big score , thereby relieving the pressure on the middle order .
12 ‘ Major has now gone back to the animal refuge .
13 The sexual pendulum has now swung back to a more central position , and that 's good news !
14 It has now reverted back to a quiet village , disturbed only at weekends by visitors from surrounding areas who come to fish , walk the frontage and watch the departure or arrival of passenger ferries and other shipping .
15 The company 's Austin , Texas-based Microprocessor and Memory Technologies Group Monday has now moved up to the first 32-bit version of the multiprotocol communications engine derived from the 68000 .
16 After the frantic design years of the early 1980s board design has now settled down to a fairly stable format and it is only construction techniques that are still changing slightly .
17 She turns to the visitor , who has now subsided on to a settee .
18 Although primarily Unix focused , Unify has now come round to the view that the success of Windows and probable success of NT can not be ignored .
19 Lloyd 's has belatedly woken up to the need for change .
20 BILL CLINTON calls himself the Comeback Kid and has again lived up to the name .
21 ‘ But it has yet to filter through to the more expensive properties . ’
22 The left has yet to wake up to the new politics as played by the Prime Minister .
23 Now effectively shy of two of those founders , it has essentially retracted back to a die-hard core of some two dozen companies from a highly publicised swell of some 250 industry lights .
24 As for multi-processing , Bull says it has recently woken up to the fact that it has a lead over most of its competitors — the Motorola-based DPX/2 line has supported symmetrical multi-processing with up to four processors for years , and now claims to have cornered a leading 20% share of the symmetrical multi-processing market .
25 Prothero the demon-king has never bounded on to the stage more sulphurously than in Hugh Kenner 's The Pound Era :
26 Against the implacable opposition of its lord , Aylesbury failed utterly to hold on to the corporate status granted it in 1554 .
27 It says right get on to a new line .
28 If you want to know any more about what he 's doing you 'd better go up to the camp and ask him yourself . ’
29 ‘ We 'd better go through to the sports field , ’ said Robert .
30 ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’
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