Example sentences of "[be] [adv prt] to [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 In rugby , Bicester are through to the semi-finals of the Provincial Insurance Cup .
2 Now that she 's gone you wo n't always be saying that you 're off to the pictures with her .
3 He had been serving in France when he met her , they had married as soon as the Hun had been finished off , and after the honeymoon it had been back to the colours for him and straight over to Ireland .
4 Here we are back to the ideas about roles and spheres which I discussed earlier in this chapter ( the work of Harding , Goodwin and so on ) .
5 Woolwich says six-month arrears are back to the levels of February 1988 and the Abbey National says short-term arrears have been declining since the end of last summer and repossessions are stable or falling .
6 That way , I think that some land might become available , but it would have to be up to the planners to be more flexible .
7 We will be back to the failings of Management Budgeting .
8 FORMER Northern Ireland champion Michael Duffy is through to the quarter-finals of the European Snooker Championship in Helsinki , Finland .
9 He 's through to the semi-finals of the nude mud-wrestling , and he 's in training .
10 The plan 's changes should go a long way to drag Lloyd 's up to the standards of other financial markets .
11 The type of material used for this project is up to the whims of the individual , and may run from a soft cedar to the more expensive hardwoods , or a combination of woods , depending on the grain pattern and colour contrasts desired .
12 No other sort of mind is up to the demands of the system , which needs to seem to have judicial impartiality and a rocklike permanance while also being quickly responsive to the latest political fads .
13 Usually it is up to the ratepayers in the area to pay for the clean-up afterwards .
14 But in any case I 'm not complaining if it 's back to the days of sitting downstairs with a brandy and soda while midwives rush about boiling water and collecting towels .
15 When both worked , it was down to the skills of the two drivers and there seemed very little to distinguish them .
16 Scotland was kilt-deep in it ; it was up to the lorry-axles on Shap , up to the bus-steps in London .
17 Bunting ( 1978 ) in more general terms disclaims this responsibility and states that with the introduction of high-yielding paddy it was to be expected there were social problems but it was up to the politicians to ‘ do something about it ’ .
18 So it was back to the hooks in the faith that something must turn up .
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