Example sentences of "[adv] [adj] [noun sg] to this [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 As the earlier reference to the Rutli Meadow implied , the lake steamer service provides the simplest and most direct access to this property of the Swiss nation , which has its own jetty .
2 Once again , good evening ladies and gentlemen , and once again I 'd like to offer an especially warm welcome to this centenary lecture to those of you who 've come from outside the university .
3 In contrast , Radburn 's layout adopts the apparently obvious solution to this problem by segregating the traffic from the people so that they are no longer in direct conflict .
4 ‘ Then perhaps I ought to read it , ’ was McAllister 's somewhat impertinent response to this statement .
5 THE most appropriate response to this production from even the most restrained of critics would be a cry of joy .
6 A second and more serious objection to this definition concerns the impossibility of completeness in another direction .
7 And Y ? is the reason I can not find a genuinely happy ending to this story ; there seems to be a choice between adding poisonous chemicals and not — both of which apparently lend themselves to doom and disaster for the earth and its creatures , rather than sweetness and happiness ever after .
8 Russia , from the first years of the eighteenth century onwards , is the most important exception to this generalisation .
9 RATHER neat addition to this space 's collection of accents , dialogue the English language in general and the collapse of dialect in particular is provided by this month 's Dalesman .
10 So I think we should all sing Happy Birthday to John , and it 'll be like a really good end to this bloke 's tape .
11 There is a succinct and spiritually satisfying answer to this question : probably not .
12 It is only in the last hundred and fifty years , in any culture , that a majority of people have had even minimal access to this technique which already , over two millennia , had been carrying a major part of human culture .
13 The first priority for most unemployed people is obtaining a job : and training or retraining courses are one seemingly obvious route to this end .
14 We find little overt reference to this facet of citizenship .
15 ‘ to proceed beyond the stop line of a ‘ Pelican ’ crossing when the vehicular traffic signal was showing a red light' As the most common defence to this type of offence is that the lights were still at green it is desirable to prove this point convincingly .
16 I think the most commonsense response to this objection is as follows : whatever may be the theoretical case about competing interpretations of low-level code in the machine , we need to remind ourselves that , if this machine is ‘ paying tax refunds ’ , as opposed to ‘ directing missiles ’ , then it is actually printing large rolls of cheques at its peripheral devices .
17 One relatively straightforward approach to this task consists in trying to refine the theory through use — to discover , by applying it to specific problems , whether it can be consistently employed and what explanations it can yield .
18 The most eloquent witness to this fact is Maxse 's old ally Bridgeman .
19 Database technology does not provide a completely satisfactory solution to this problem .
20 Young H from Wallasey was a pretty major exception to this rule — he did the drop in of doom off the extension to flat bottom hipper , slashed about did mass ollies onto the extension , laybacks , wore an agnostic Front tee , and generally skated like he 'd been around since the sevs and was a dwarf just pretending to be under 16 .
21 The most humorous caption to this photograph received in writing before April 20th will win its sender a unique personal T shirt .
22 The most humorous caption to this photograph received in writing before November 1st will win its sender a Canoeist T shirt .
23 An an and to speak quite bluntly on the state of the evidence at the moment it seems that that is a very possible end to this case , in which case , in which case the jury wo n't even get round to having this matter .
24 The first version of the currently accepted answer to this question was developed in 1960 by Harry Hess of Princeton University .
25 I came up with a very simple answer to this problem and hope it will help others .
26 If I have thereby diminished Carr and Rees 's very valuable contribution to this subject , then I am sincerely sorry .
27 Even with the modern partnership , no very satisfactory solution to this problem has been found , and the most one can say is that the partners have an equitable interest , often described as a lien , which floats over the partnership assets throughout the duration of the firm , although it crystallises only on dissolution .
28 A very rough parallel to this sort of context can be found in language manuals providing the learner with a picture of the railway station and the operative words for travelling by train .
29 And er can can we scrape away to say Chairman that er , you know this , this , this situation er it is not to do with government policies , we are paying a very heavy price to this country for world recession as we have paid this very high price , very very large amounts of money that had to be used for people who are unfortunate enough to fall out of employment .
30 There is one very bad answer to this question , which is depressingly common and goes like this .
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