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

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1 He prefers to see believers as the heirs to the one Abrahamic covenant which inaugurated the Old Testament people of God ( Acts 3:25 ) .
2 In cases concerning children it is often necessary to subjugate justice to the adults to the interests of the children .
3 With the exception of the postroom boys , for obvious reasons , it has been decided to rectify use of the lifts to only four journeys per person per day .
4 The degree structure maintained at Edinburgh allows a student to leave decisions on the subjects to be followed and on the final degree to quite a late stage .
5 ( To enable us to give instructions for the repairs to be started you should also submit the completed claim form without delay together with a detailed estimate . )
6 The duties of seller and buyer under an open sale contract are " concurrent conditions " so that , if the contract is silent , " the seller must be ready and willing to give possession of the goods to the buyer in exchange for the price , and the buyer must be ready and willing to pay the price in exchange for possession of the goods " ( SGA 1979 , s28 ) .
7 There are two points here : the first is that no matter how substantial is one 's background in user education , advice can become steadily less relevant with the passage of time unless a determined effort is made to keep contact with the users to be instructed ; ie to continue to instruct the user personally .
8 This marks their first exchange of vows , which is reiterated when Lise pretends to harness Colas by the ribbons to a trap of which she is the driver .
9 If the topic relates to the entire Region , sufficient documents should be sent to each District Council 's Library Headquarters , to allow distribution of the documents to each branch Library and for headquarters use .
10 First he was to endorse publicly the NoS Equal Opportunities approach , and second he was to agree to allow negotiations with the unions to ‘ run their course ’ quietly .
11 A joint working group of officials was commissioned to develop guidelines on the undertakings to be provided by the governments , the legal and commercial framework , and the various technical , environmental and financial requirements to be met by promoters .
12 For example to categorise the Bromley decision as one which has a ‘ hidden notion of proportionality , ’ requiring a balance between the benefits to transport users against the burdens to ratepayers , does not resolve any of the crucially difficult issues in the case .
13 The first canals were constructed between 1757 and 1761 in order to transport coal from the mines to the towns and factories ; in the years 1791–7 the canal system expanded rapidly , and by 1815 covered most of England 's transport requirements in the industrial field .
14 Apart from a very limited number of highly specialist areas of the environment where changes will automatically trigger responses within the enterprise ( e.g. the financial markets , meteorology ) , an enterprise can not respond to changes in its environment unless someone , or some people make(s) a positive effort to transfer information about the changes to the person or persons within the enterprise charged with responding to the changes ( or not , as the case might be ) .
15 In deciding to take action over the aids to CNP , the Commission points to the unfairness of state subsidies in the ‘ fiercely competitive ’ ECU 280 000m EC chemical industry , in which more than a third of all production is traded between the 12 member states .
16 This type of cylinder is designed for direct boiler systems , so has two tappings to take fittings for the pipes to and from the boiler but no internal heating coil .
17 One also has to take notice of the disadvantages to one 's life of too obsessive a preoccupation with questions of the precise limits of authority .
18 All we need to do is to push microelectrodes into the regions to which the prestriate cortex projects and look for the cells that only respond to particular objects .
19 The Northern Ireland Act 1982 provides for the existing Assembly ( which lacks both legislative and executive powers ) to make proposals for the transfers to the Assembly of legislative and executive powers but such proposals must be such as to be ‘ likely to command widespread acceptance throughout the community ’ and although attempts are currently under way to evolve such proposals , they have not so far met with success .
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