Example sentences of "[conj] [noun sg] to face " in BNC.

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1 A ‘ radical ’ new procedure , under which complaints staff make inquiries by telephone or face to face with the parties to produce a summary for the complaints committee , is proposed .
2 The method of information gathering ( by questionnaire or face to face interview ) may also affect the results .
3 His telephone rang almost at once ; he was through to the chief 's personal assistant , a grey-haired lady of vast experience who monitored and sometimes modulated communication ( other than face to face ) between the chief and the outside world — including his policemen .
4 The trial follows the rapid growth of BT 's video conferencing operations which allow subscribers to replace expensive business travel and face to face meetings with a television link .
5 In small communities with a strong religious nucleus there is always an element of censure — sometimes unspoken , sometimes whispered , more rarely shouted aloud and face to face — of those who are thought to have transgressed against the faith .
6 It is the more active and face to face manifestation of care ( Parker 1981 ) .
7 Both by letter and face to face .
8 7 Instantaneous communication and face to face contracts
9 Kay Evans strongly recommends the following two books to Medau members : The World Walks By , by Sue Masham and Shirely du Benlay ( Collins 1987 , £2.95 ) , and Face to Face , by Frances Young ( Epworth 1985 , £2.95 ) .
10 Most people want to like art — they know it 's good for you , or at any rate looks good on you — but face to face with a great painting they feel like gate-crashers at a Mayfair reception .
11 Sometimes it is slightly easier to say ‘ No ’ over the telephone , but face to face many women find it impossible .
12 Staff , in offering a course , are becoming directly accountable to colleagues in other subjects , not in an abstract sense , but face to face .
13 But how he was to do it when face to face with Pharaoh was far from certain .
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