Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] [det] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 On the A four two three , the Kidlington to Banbury road , they expect delays still to go on through much of the evening due to the traffic lights at Bunkers Hill , and on the A four two one , just south of Bicester , the changes to the road layout at the new M forty interchange has made traffic fairly heavy still .
2 But to go on from this to the recommendation of the Bullock Report that workers should have representation on a company 's board is to change the nature of the institution , which in my judgment is quite unwarranted .
3 European pricing is expected to come in around that of the US at $22,000 per server licence .
4 European pricing is expected to come in around that of the US at $22,000 per server licence .
5 The shops and showrooms themselves are worth visiting if you want to catch up on some of the latest modern furniture , lighting and fabric design .
6 This definition , according to Schumpeter , is a summary or basis of a revised theory of democracy which is much truer to life and at the same time salvages much of what the sponsors of democratic method really mean by this term' Schumpeter builds up a definition of the modern political system in the West , which he claims ‘ to try out on some of the more important features of the structure and working of the political engine in democratic countries ’ .
7 But Carolyn , backed up by Phil Morris , hammered away at the point that furnishing fabrics were not like clothes , where customers did not expect to come back for more of the same .
8 to fit in with some of the other things that we .
9 This does not seem to fit in at all with the demand for autonomy .
10 The standard of NHS accommodation available to trained staff is variable , and even if you are happy to put up with this in the short term , in the longer term it may have adverse effects on your personal life or hopes of a future career .
11 I do n't want to go out to much to the side there .
12 But why do we I mean why do we encourage kids to go out like this at the moment .
13 Because you 're not going to have to go back on many of the things .
14 They are not going to go back to those of the heady days of the late 1980s . ’
15 Erm , I 'd like to go back to some of the comments that were
16 If there is time , students should now be encouraged to go back to some of the more difficult Tape Units dealing with connected speech ( say from Tape Unit 12 onwards , missing out Tape Unit 15 ) ; they will probably discover a lot of things they did not notice before .
17 To plough on with some of the other negative aspects of the budget , I 've talked about the charges .
18 They 're able to hold on to that for the duration of the talk and be able to understand them as concepts and therefore it helps to put over the ideas .
19 It 's like the same issue we talked about the three year plan projects if necessary we 'll have to slow down on some of the projects , certainly to get through this budget year intact .
20 Plans to airlift up to half of the wild Javan rhinos to new reserves have proved controversial .
21 And he 'd have had to hold back on some of the madder racist stuff in.public .
22 I seem to get on with most of the teachers in the school , so do most of the other kids .
23 It would certainly be possible for a jackdaw to get in through any of the eight window openings , but then I thought , No .
24 It is vital to face up to some of the problems inherent in the situation and to be as honest as possible about all the relationships involved .
25 In a similar way , his When the wind blows enables the reader to face up to some of the appalling possibilities and realities of nuclear warfare in a way that is just bearable .
26 In 1978 , I went over to France for the final day of the parliamentary elections , expecting to stay up for most of the night as one would in the UK .
27 Nigel pretended a relative had just died and managed to get out of most of the remaining classes of the term .
28 It is particularly helpful , despite the weaknesses associated with them , to think back to some of the arguments presented by Cockburn and Dearlove which were discussed in section 4.2 .
29 Now , as a consequence of my eight marginal years on a drug squad , visits to the United Nations , and the three years at university reading a subject which few knew anything about , but would be willing to dismiss along with all of the social sciences , I was in danger of being irrevocably cast into the mould of being a ‘ college man ’ or academic .
30 Marie , still in her pyjamas , was sitting slumped at the table that took up most of the floor space : you had to squeeze round it to move about at all in the tiny kitchen , and Marie 's legs had permanent bruises from its sharp comers .
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