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

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1 The difference between the colours is all to do with the distances between the humps and dips .
2 But there , the distance between the humps and dips is all to do with the pitch of the note-the note that we hear .
3 Every bend reveals another staggering visual feast and it is all to do with the light , the dynamic mountain ridges , the pure white sandy beaches and the undisturbed peace .
4 It 's all to do with a guilt complex . ’
5 ‘ It 's all to do with the breed , ’ he explains .
6 It 's all to do with the C.O. He wanted to court-martial me , only I heard them trying to find me so I hid in the latrines and I do n't know what happened in the end .
7 It 's all to do with the way different people 's minds work .
8 ‘ Well , it 's all to do with the ballistics , ’ said our sportsdesk .
9 Several times in fact , once on the tube train , twice on the ordinary trains , so it was n't the pictures that upset me — Doc Keylock had explained all that years ago , it 's all to do with the panting , what they call hyperventilation , causing a temporary malfunction in the brain — but I 'd never had anything as vivid as the memory I 'd just been through .
10 It 's all to do with the £19,250 tax bracket and engines below 2 litres .
11 This is to acknowledge that the court 's role is merely to act as a long-stop .
12 But this is only to look at the question as a matter of law .
13 But first let us follow up the possibility that the problem is entirely to do with the estimate .
14 and er there 's enough to do at the front and the back .
15 And the position we take , er as doctors advising the public here , is obviously to err on the side of prudence , and we therefore recommend that there should be er a graded timetable reduction in the use of conventional pesticides , particularly where alternatives are available .
16 His diagnostic task is somehow to differentiate between the information he is receiving which is false and that which is valid and follow this by the selection of a remedial strategy .
17 Of course , her letter has given me extra cause to continue thinking of her as ‘ Miss Kenton ’ , since it would seem , sadly , that her marriage is finally to come to an end .
18 That is soon to dawn on the people of Wales , and on people throughout Britain .
19 Ruthless cuts are being made to Canada 's railway system and the last whistle is soon to blow for the country 's most famous train , The Canadian .
20 WORK is soon to start on a £5.2m scheme which will prevent raw sewage being pumped on to a Merseyside beach .
21 A copy of the report goes to the minister responsible in advance of publication where the matter is shortly to come before the Council of Ministers for decision .
22 So the reason I put Jasper Carrott up here is just to think for a moment , here 's somebody who 's obviously a really effective and great communicator .
23 The initial experience for any child is just to play with the pieces to familiarise himself with them all and this often takes the form of picture and pattern making — similar to the early use of the other structured apparatus .
24 You 're outrageous you are , you 've got to have the gift of the gab in the first place , that 's just to walk into a shop or office and , my girlfriend 's think that 's what chain
25 Although Fletcher admitted that England have not come up to standard over the last three months , he also believes that a poor itinerary and a lack of turning pitches in English domestic cricket is largely to blame for the string of dismal performances .
26 Where there is usually to pop of a toy cannon , there is silence and , come to think of it , I do n't remember hearing the clock strike midnight either .
27 The contact procedure is usually to begin with a number of preliminary questions to ensure that the people contacted do fulfil the quota requirements .
28 In this context we may distinguish ( i ) the impartiality which is part and parcel of making moral or legal-judgments on the basis of formulating universal rules permitting or prohibiting certain types of conduct as distinct from making decisions only about particular persons and particular occasions : the impartiality not just of universalisability but of rules which actually are to be universalised ; ( ii ) the impartiality of being a non-involved person which is particularly relevant to the position of the person who is applying legal or moral rules to particular circumstances and which is directly to do with the characteristics of the judge who according to this standard must have no personal interest in the outcome of the case , but which may also be relevant in the process of legislation since legislators may have particular and personal interests in the outcome of the legislation in question ; ( iii ) there is the idea of impartiality as a norm of moral and judicial reasoning which has to do with giving due consideration to all relevant factors , a practice which may further but is not guaranteed by impartiality of the first two types .
29 MELROSE president Jim Russell has claimed that the best is still to come from the Greenyards men .
30 As for being free — to be in thrall to a ruling obsession is hardly to exist in a state of freedom .
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