Example sentences of "[verb] forward [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The site that was identified or potentially identified by by the house builders in York was a site which both the County Council and the District Council considered performed a number of greenbelt functions , I think that it would be accepted that in any development plan land should only be allocated if there were some degree of certainty that it would come forward for development within the plan period , the site that was identified , there had been no objections made to the Southern Ryedale local plan so therefore there were no indications that it would have come forward for development within that plan period anyway , had it been identified , had it been allocated .
2 I am sure that we are all glad that many of the lenders — building societies , banks and others — have come forward with schemes to ensure , or at least to advance the proposition , that the number of repossessions should be reduced to the absolute minimum .
3 Trent Polytechnic and the Polytechnic of North London had come forward with proposals for full-time BEd courses .
4 They have come forward with plans which , they say , are carefully costed and carefully thought through and represent the interests of the great body of the Scottish people .
5 I notice that the Milk Marketing Board has come forward with propositions .
6 Since then , various voluntary groups throughout the campus , the UK and abroad have come forward with names and addresses of active alumni , some of whom have been networking enthusiastically for many years outwith the official organisation of either the Graduates Association of the University .
7 Two witnesses have come forward with information that could lead to the killer 's arrest .
8 Now the Hurst Motorcycle Centre in Belfast has come forward with Hurst Rescue , a 24-hour rescue service for bikes , to cover this area .
9 As between the other three , I have not expressed a particular preference , but because no developer has come forward in connection with sector three , there has perhaps been less detailed attention paid to that sector the A fifty nine , than to others .
10 This legislation on GMOs has come forward in advance of public debate on the environmental risks of genetic engineering , and indeed before widespread debate on on the broader social , economic and ethical implications of the new biotechnologies .
11 Talbot and Van Gelder looked at each other in silence , then bent forward over Theodore 's shoulders to look at the figures he had added up .
12 Again and again the film was aired : into the car , back turned , head forward on arms .
13 The British electorate — we have rolled forward to Friday — has opted for change and made a job of it , sweeping the Natural Law Party into power .
14 On the other hand , Mr Moynihan looks forward with foreboding .
15 He looks forward with impatience to the time when he will be sent to Siberia ; his martyrdom ends with the beginning of his punishment " .
16 Eleanor Pitman ( Kent ) one of the first Qualified Teachers , Eleanor looks forward to spending and enjoying more time with her family .
17 The situation in Europe and especially the history of Serbia must have influenced her in her choice of subject and in this sense her book looks forward to Buchan rather than back to Anthony Hope .
18 Hester Eisenstein , for example , looks forward to women transforming the world in the image of what she calls ‘ the woman-centered values at the core of feminism ’ .
19 LEFT : Cute kid John Kocinski looks forward to lunch
20 MATT WOLF looks forward to Ian McDiarmid 's Volpone , and to Serena Gordon in Look Look by Michael Frayn
21 Though he looks forward to Durham at Worcester , watching opportunities are limited ‘ because there are a lot of unsocial hours in social work . ’
22 The views of both managers coming up as Mark Kiff looks forward to D-Day .
23 MERSEYSIDE 'S most famous window cleaner puts his ladders away on Friday evenings … and looks forward to Saturday Afternoon Fever .
24 The term formative assessment refers to assessment which looks forward to pupils ' future learning , as opposed to summative assessment which looks back at what pupils have already achieved .
25 It may appear curiously anachronistic to include a chapter on " hearing children read " in a book which looks forward to language and learning in an age of computers and mechanisation .
26 Rachel turned and Jimmy moved forward into Len 's line of vision .
27 The Duke of Orléans left the field with his contingent , perhaps objecting to Ring John 's novel decision that his army should advance dismounted , and the king then moved forward on foot with his troops .
28 Both sides were now eager to come face to face , and as General Cope moved forward from Dunbar towards Edinburgh the Jacobite army moved out to meet him .
29 In so far as the idea of emancipation moved forward in government circles in 1856 , the landless variety prevailed over the landed .
30 The Mail was firm in its forecast : the other papers only looked forward with relish to her eventual arrival .
  Next page