Example sentences of "[to-vb] [noun pl] [adv prt] to the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The 1988 Act allows open enrolment , so that schools are forced to accept children up to the limit of their capacity .
2 As a result banks may have to call in money from the discount houses , which , in turn being short of liquidity , have to sell bills back to the Bank of England ( acting as lender of last resort ) .
3 Place the royal icing in a piping bag with a fine writing nozzle and use to pipe tassels on to the towel , ties on to the shorts and arms on to the sunglasses .
4 Owen could not tell whether this actually was the demonstration , conveniently moved in view of the circumstances , or whether Osman meant to whip things up to the point when the crowd would storm the barricade .
5 I like to see things through to the finish — and to see them through successfully . ’
6 SPEEDWAY : Edinburgh Monarchs beat Middlesbrough Bears 57–33 in the Homefire League 's second division to put Bears back to the bottom of the table .
7 ONE of Saddam Hussein 's henchmen yesterday launched a bitter personal attack on Premier John Major and President George Bush over the allies ' decision to send warplanes back to the Gulf .
8 Pupils must not be used as a means to keep teachers up to the mark .
9 A significant portion of the new funds would be used for NASA 's plans to conduct a massive study of the planet Earth , and for Bush 's initiative to send astronauts back to the moon and on to Mars .
10 And £22,730 will be used to help pay for repairs to bridge steps down to the riverside at Llangollen .
11 Common of mast carries the right to turn pigs on to the forest .
12 Only if registered and paid up as road running clubs will they be able to elect officials on to the Road Running Commission .
13 The right to elect members on to the Executive Committee and to vote at the Annual General Meeting
14 It is possible to appeal against a decision to transfer proceedings back to the family proceedings court ( The Children ( Allocation of Proceedings ) ( Appeals ) Order 1991 ( SI No 1801 , art 2 ) ) .
15 Existing users could apply for " licences of right " , which permitted them to take quantities up to the maximum that had been abstracted previously .
16 The Purchaser will therefore wish to be able to recover damages up to the amount of any sums paid ( or payable ) to creditors , as well any cash paid to the Vendor if there are major warranty claims .
17 Censorship is a recurring problem in libraries , and there is no issue in librarianship which is more likely to bring libraries on to the pages of the Press , frequently in a damaging and trivial representation of the library profession .
18 A farmer is trying to bring jobs back to the countryside by turning his Victorian cattle sheds into offices .
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