Example sentences of "[be] offered to [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | A telephone consultancy now operates and CAB training has been offered to community group advisers . |
2 | The Gospel was to be offered to Jew and Gentile alike . |
3 | Temporary club membership can be offered to hotel guests as part of the total accommodation package . |
4 | Only 1,000 of Sunderland 's 25,000 derby tickets have been sold and the remainder will be offered to gold card number 110,000 today , and 10,001–17,000 on Wednesday . |
5 | Younger scientists are particularly welcome at BNASS meetings and a number of bursaries will be offered to research students . |
6 | The type of building can determine and/or limit the service being offered to dementia sufferers . |
7 | Software for the Unix System V.4-based machines include network management and a suite of capacity planning software written in-house which is being offered to Unix International as a potential standard component . |
8 | The general impression was of a considerable amount of training being offered to county librarians , geared towards professionals , or senior non-professionals with supervisory duties . |
9 | Several areas that CPRW considers of ‘ extreme environmental sensitivity ’ are currently being offered to oil companies by the DTI ( see map ) . |
10 | The Government 's official scientific advisers , the Joint Nature Conservation Committee , has recommended that many of the blocks currently being offered to oil companies should be withdrawn from the licensing round . |
11 | The hotel also has bikes for hire and a 25% reduction is offered to Enterprise guests . |
12 | It requires a conscious policy decision to treat Community law as part and parcel of the legal framework in which day-to-day legal advice is offered to business clients . |
13 | The wine list is offered to conference delegates , mature students at summer schools and guests who attend special receptions such as military reunions . |
14 | None the less , within the Review itself a particular kind of space was offered to modernism , seen especially in reviews written by Bateson ( see pp. 81–2 ) . |