Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] [art] later " in BNC.

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1 Philip the Fair 's government was often ( sometimes surprisingly ) prepared to compromise during the later stages of his reign , an attitude clearly reflected in the ‘ process ’ of Montreuil in Ponthieu .
2 I note that there is in train a proposal to change legislation to provide for a later retirement date for females to equate with those of the males .
3 State-sponsored housing began to reach further down the social scale than previously and house building under subsidy began to increase in the later 1920s .
4 At first you seemed to concentrate on the later works , the Fourth Symphony onwards .
5 Their fun , courtesy of the Conservative Party , was to come at a later stage .
6 It is advisable , wherever appropriate , to get managers to certify entries in a learning diary and to include in it references which may be difficult to obtain at a later date .
7 Yet , embittered pigeons have a great tendency to come home to roost at a later date , wreaking merry havoc as they zoom in on perceived injustices and ensure that all and sundry realise the iniquities of their previous employer .
8 This was a necessity to qualify for a later call to the Bar .
9 He did , however , come back to ride in the later races .
10 Refinement was initially with the minimization option of X-PLOR , and subsequently with the TNT package , with restrained individual B factors allowed to vary in the later cycles .
11 The ends of the coil should be soldered to the termination strips to allow for the later attachment of heavier gauge connecting cable .
12 I think the postman would never have been able to decipher your scribble , your own version of Walser 's MS , Bleistiftgebiet or Kingdom of the Pencil , which we were to describe in a later poem , ‘ The Poem in the Pencil ’ .
13 As I said both in my statement and in an earlier answer , we have the option to decide at a later stage , when others enter stage 3 , whether that is the right thing for this country to do .
14 That is a matter for the House to decide at a later stage .
15 If the House were to decide at a later stage to enter a single currency , it would be , first , because it had decided that the economic convergence conditions in Europe were right for a single currency to be beneficial to this country .
16 Once all work on the system has been completed , then the ground must be tidied up and left in such a state that it is easy to assess at a later date what rabbits have been left behind .
17 The book maintains an air of excitement throughout , at some points asking questions and leaving the reader to ponder until a later chapter .
18 Councillors heard that Homesmith had a good self-build record , but agreed any contract should be put out to tender at a later stage .
19 Extra time may be spent learning the basics of editing , or more advanced camera work etc. , or this might be left to develop at a later workshop .
20 And if you decide to cancel at a later date , you 'll receive a full , and prompt refund on all unmailed issues .
21 Ada Younger is to go out to Zimbabwe in the late summer and hopes to arrange for a group from the church to go at a later date .
22 The basic rules of procedure for any such exercise , short or prolonged , remain very much the same : a six-week programme may well include a series of short ten-minute sequences as well as other episodes and exercises and in devising materials for either one would take into account the basic procedures of materials production which we shall have occasion to examine in a later chapter .
23 ‘ My liver is to be buried separately from the rest of me , with full honours , ’ he was to say in a later film .
24 As the day began to cool in the later afternoon , I walked up the hill road behind Reckweilerhof through twelve hundred feet of gently sloping sward .
25 But perhaps the precise reasons for its origin and the timing of its confirmation are not so important ; of greater significance is that it became a key precedent during the ensuing century for those who wished to restrict the outflow of money from the English church to the church universal and in particular to the Roman Curia ; its appeal to the interests of patrons whose intentions were thwarted or impaired by impositions on the houses so that ‘ infinite loss and disinheritance are like to ensue to the founders of the said houses and their heirs ’ was to reappear in the later statute of Provisors .
26 Positivism particularly favours the indeterminate sentence : it is premature to decide at the time of sentence how long the offender should be detained for , since this may depend on how quickly the treatment works ; ideally therefore the release decision should be left in the hands of treatment experts to take at a later date .
27 Some firms are very flexible on this issue and where possible , allow them to relocate at a later date .
28 He was taken to the local police station , charged and bailed out to return at a later date .
29 After an inconclusive discussion , the Cabinet agreed to return at a later meeting to the question ‘ whether the Government , as such , should tender advice to the House of Commons on the abolition of the death penalty ’ .
30 ‘ Those who are to be returned to unit as unsuitable can come overland together with those who will be required to form a second squadron to operate in a later phase . ’
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