Example sentences of "[verb] us to [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Mr. Ashworth helpfully referred us to a substantial number of United States decisions .
2 Woodger made his Palace debut on 1 November 1905 at Swindon in a United League game , helped us to a 6–1 win and scored two goals .
3 They do n't direct us to the late survival of a gypsy paradise .
4 but power us to the next disgrace .
5 Our enjoyment of his resourcefulness can ( temporarily ! ) blind us to the moral significance of his actions .
6 There were no roads direct from the station to where the world began , but the carriage drivers , squatting over their breakfasts , directed us to an abandoned railway line which cut across country .
7 ‘ They drove us to a lonely creek , ’ she said .
8 So we might in fact simplify this by saying these are the enabling factors if you like , to leave home these are the motivating factors pulling us to a certain destination .
9 Another Greek has cut down a Trojan who falls under the handle , leading us to the other side .
10 We see then that the idea introduces us to a radical gospel which brings an uncomfortable message to our hearts .
11 This leads us to a fundamental distinction in the character of critical judgements , a distinction between what I shall call internal and external criteria of judgement .
12 His devotional works are full of joy ; religion , he said , ‘ leads us to a huge felicity through pleasant ways ’ .
13 This leads us to a brief discussion of the developments within these fields since the time when the early sociologists were working .
14 That finding leads us to a shocking conclusion : a gesture is more individual than an individual .
15 This leads us to the disturbing conclusion that there is a degree of subjectivity in identifying a stretch of language as discourse — it may be meaningful and thus communicate to one person in a way which another person does not have the necessary knowledge to make sense of — yet in practice we find that discourse is usually perceived as such by groups , rather than individuals .
16 Modern conditions have involved us in rivalry of armaments which is now a conscious struggle to achieve by expenditure and science , by diplomacy and alliances , a balance of power which always eludes us , and because it is always variable and unstable condemns us to a bloodless battle , a dry warfare of steel and gold .
17 And are we to think that this loving God really wants us to linger on in pain and without dignity when , according to the same dogma , He is in any case calling us to a better life ?
18 Nevertheless it is by no means certain that the use of such predicates necessarily commits us to an anti-monist stance .
19 Talk of ‘ processes ’ and ‘ states ’ commits us to an inappropriate way of looking at the matter — as though the only difference between understanding understanding and understanding sweating is that in the case of understanding understanding our gaze is directed inwards .
20 If the medium of issue is magnetic then the indefinite maintenance of bit-perfect records commits us to an active program of periodic renewal and integrity checking , or a one-off transfer to a more permanent medium .
21 Our second association item takes us to a late autumn in the next reign .
22 A consideration of two dreams in Shakespeare 's plays takes us to a similar conclusion .
23 Peter Wood 's brief is to guide us to an acceptable quality management system that genuinely reflects our practices .
24 An unexpected gap in the mountains beckoned us to a silent lake fed by waterfalls and surrounded by woods with banks of moss , lichens and fungi alive with lemmings scurrying among holes and tree roots .
25 Laughter here might anaesthetize our feelings , deaden us to the moral issue .
26 We have set very clear targets which will return us to a basic level of performance in the next two years .
27 I assume this can go ahead immediately , without tying us to a detailed course outline .
28 Our approach has the advantage of not tying us to a particular syntax and semantics for the space of expressions .
29 Russian , ultimately , has brought us to a similar endeavour .
30 Is the Prime Minister aware , first , that people will want to study in detail what he has brought back and will need far more time to do that , and , secondly , that a treaty committing us to a European union probably represents an even bigger change than our entry into the Community in 1975 , the long-term effect of which over many Parliaments will be great ?
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