Example sentences of "[noun] bring [pers pn] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Indicating one of the wider streets leading off the square , he added , ‘ A short walk down Calle Lunga brings you to the Grand Canal . ’
2 The texts of Roman law bring us to the intriguing conclusion that by late classical times the only person who acquired property under trust and with it an unassailable title was the bona fide purchaser for value without notice .
3 Centrally organised arrangements are sometimes not appropriate and that point brings me to the hon. Member for Kincardine and Deeside ( Mr. Stephen ) .
4 Dathan and Abiram challenge Moses on the grounds of high-handedness and his failure to bring them into the promised land ( 13–14 ) .
5 An ANC statement on Jan. 27 expressed regret that the PAC was controlled by hostile forces , and that efforts to bring it into the main course of the armed struggle had failed .
6 Two hours ' climbing brought us to the narrow ledge from which one entered Antony 's cave through a cleft in the cliff-face .
7 Boswell brings us to the very bones — literally — of their excursion to the churchyard behind the stable-block .
8 A 90 minute flight brings you to the southern capital and the Garden of Oman .
9 The gate porter brought me to the main entrance , and I was shown into a small pleasant office in the front of the administrative block .
10 At the end of the path another kissing gate brought you to the rough farm lane running past Milford House , owned by the Ware family , the Salisbury leather magnates .
11 The SVi has the basic 2-litre engine — catalytically converted like the other petrol models — but its interior brings it into the luxury class .
12 A pleasant 15-minute walk brings you to the first two faces , which contain dozens of routes at VS to E1 .
13 A short walk along the coastline past the few prettily painted small hotels brought us to the gorgeous bay lined with palm trees which we shared with the numerous shy crabs which intermittently popped out of the holes in the white sand .
14 Miss Armstrong said Labour wanted to work alongside the existing CTCs to bring them within the mainstream education system .
15 But it is a deeply conservative trade which has resolutely resisted most attempts to bring it into the twentieth century , to make it more efficient , or to make access to the law more available to the ordinary citizen .
16 Will he consider bringing the Conservative party , and talking to the Scottish National party to bring it into the Scottish Constitutional Convention so that we can then have a genuine debate on which way the constitution of Scotland should go ?
  Next page