Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv] from [noun sg] to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Indeed it is vital that they should do so from time to time .
2 An important property of such a clock is its stability ; that is , its timing does not alter much from day to day .
3 I express to you the most earnest desire of my heart to be that prosperity and success in social and moral improvement may attend increasingly from year to year the progress of this library .
4 We have suggested that visionary leadership can vary importantly from leader to leader .
5 The expression of modal meanings , for instance , can vary widely from language to language and has to be handled sensitively and carefully in translation .
6 Decisions about the nature of planning will of course vary greatly from school to school , but it 's important for the head to remember that we accomplish most when the staff and children are working together .
7 Named dances would come and go and vary greatly from club to club .
8 The calculated exposure time should n't change much from batch to batch , but test ½ a sheet for each grade .
9 The calculated exposure time should n't change much from batch to batch , but test ½ a sheet for each grade .
10 It can and does change , even from year to year ; and may change appreciably from decade to decade .
11 Moods may change easily from laughter to sadness ; they cry easily even at the thought of pain .
12 In the past it has generally been assumed either that spending patterns will change incrementally from year to year or be based on some more or less rational overview of budgets .
13 His aim , from his Northampton days on , was a team that could switch quickly from attack to defence and back again as the game dictated : and the development of Arsenal 's defence-in-depth system was matched by the creation of one of the most powerful forward lines in soccer history .
14 Decide for yourself with our easy-to-follow chart — but remember , prices will vary slightly from area to area , and from one company to another
15 These orders may vary slightly from teacher to teacher , so that the first order , for example , might be think of not stiffening the neck … .
16 User education in individual higher education libraries can change enormously from year to year so no attempt is made to describe current activity comprehensively .
17 However , the contribution of each property to fitness must vary dramatically from year to year as well as from place to place within the field .
18 Does she go there from time to time ?
19 The annual fees can change markedly from year to year and so the figures which follow , for the session 1993–94 , must be used only as an indication of the minimum likely to apply in later sessions .
20 Although the precise configuration of landowners and farmers could vary considerably from village to village , there is little doubt that they formed , from the point of view of the farm worker , a coherent and easily identifiable ruling class against which the farm worker , either individually or collectively , was relatively powerless .
21 The amount of fall in metabolic rate may vary considerably from person to person , just as metabolic rate varies from person to person .
22 The amount of leave given may vary considerably from country to country .
23 The detail and type of plan used will vary considerably from student to student .
24 Such a move is only a matter of time , but the time-scale will vary considerably from authority to authority depending on the phasing-in of their delegation schemes and the speed at which they restructure the various service departments to meet the new role which has to be created within the strategy and time-scale set down by the legislation .
25 The eye does not sweep smoothly from left to right when reading but instead makes a series of fixations with rapid movements ( saccades ) between fixations .
26 It had been discovered in the eighteenth century that light does not travel instantaneously from source to observer ; rather , it goes at a certain speed , about 186,000 miles ( 300,000 kilometers ) a second .
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