Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [pron] to the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To it we owe that nervous , spidery line of the drawings — so quick , so attentive , yet so despairing — that alerts us to the elusiveness of the subject at the same time that it perseveres in the attempt to render it .
2 Once everybody gets to know The Afros , we 're gon' introduce 'em to the Baldhead Posse .
3 Few make it to the top .
4 She watched as Luke fought his own anger and then half threw him to the ground .
5 All this leads me to the conclusion that the greater part of the passage of geological time has left over most of the earth no more than Shakespeare 's " gap in nature " .
6 This leads us to the composition and behaviour of sports crowds , especially at football matches and the current debate about the reasons for hooliganism .
7 Our concern then Mr Mayor is to see social housing used correctly , for those in greatest need and this leads us to the conclusion that means testing is the best way to ensure , is positive discrimination in favour of people in such need .
8 This owed something to the thoroughness with which Gloucester outmanoeuvred the opposition , which meant that he did not need to hunt for extra support .
9 This owed something to the thoroughness with which Gloucester outmanoeuvred the opposition , which meant that he did not need to hunt for extra support .
10 Against the urgent advice of Keith , Fraser and other veterans , they decided that the English were afraid to put it to the test ; but they were not .
11 ‘ I doubt if His Grace would ever stand up in a court-room to give evidence on my behalf , but I counted on Magistrate Peck being afraid to put it to the test . ’
12 Two trucks overtaking one another brushed him to the side .
13 This takes you to the top of the crane and the two flags — well done , level complete .
14 Oh well it 's always protection of the family and yet they 're not prepared to put anything to the family .
15 I really think , although I would not be prepared to put it to the test , that you could go out in the streets of London in your nightdress and nobody would notice .
16 She also makes the crucial point that it is wrong to attribute it to the mass of black people , finding it most marked among some intellectual and political leaders , who also obscure the central roles played by lesbians and gays in black communities .
17 Kylie will never forget the major role PWL played in changing her life , making a millionairess out of a minor TV star , and is prepared to defend them to the hilt .
18 This carried them to the Plain of Finuval where the shattered remnants of the Elf armies were assembling for a desperate last stand .
19 He was a memorable mixture of inner repose and outer restlessness , of calculation , even shrewdness , and a princely carelessness , of something certain , never to be shaken , only perhaps tested and eroded as the years went by , and something uncertain , game for everything and willing to push himself to the point of self-destruction .
20 If he put up a scheme , you would be willing to follow him to the ends of the earth to ensure its fulfilment .
21 This conceded something to the Americans , though if Nato were seriously pressed it was evident that — short of surrender — nuclear weapons would have to be used in some way or other .
22 Management can encourage this by ‘ selling ’ a sense of the corporate ‘ mission ’ , or by promoting the company 's ‘ image ’ ; it can reward the ‘ right ’ attitudes and punish ( or simply not employ ) those who are n't prepared to commit themselves to the culture ;
23 This brings us to the subject of heat convection and heat loss .
24 This brings us to the problem of whether to leave serial harmony as it is , the product of a system , or to override the system and make the harmonic result our own .
25 This brings us to the problem of phonological recoding within sentence context .
26 This brings us to the relationship between citizenship and community .
27 This brings us to the concept of risk-sharing .
28 This brings us to the question central to the understanding of Queen Mary : the nature of Scottish monarchy , and the factors which made the relationship between kings and their subjects successful or unsuccessful .
29 This brings us to the question of those notoriously stuffy announcers .
30 This brings us to the question of how we should consider that portion of the surplus-value which is unproductively consumed .
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