Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv prt] to the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A day to unwind and slow down to the leisurely pace of a Greek Cruise .
2 If they think peace is impossible , they will hang on to the extra layer of defence these territories provide .
3 We will opt in to the Social Chapter of the new European Treaty and introduce employment standards common in successful economies , including the best health and safety legislation .
4 But then the feet began to stretch wider and wider apart , and I knew that when the feet were as far apart as I was long , I 'd fall through to the heaving belly beneath .
5 You 've always made it quite clear that you were staying here and that I could fuck off to the other end of the world for all you cared .
6 The difficulty of winning a championship , the strain and gamble it involves , are so great that if a driver does not carry through to the following year sufficient momentum and he does not have the same advantage — of car , team , etc. — that he had the previous year , the results are often disappointing .
7 A spokesman said : ‘ The problem with heavy rainfall and flash floods is that a lot of it runs away before it can soak through to the underground aquifers . ’
8 If the dramatic frame is an enquiry or an investigation the children might well be creating still images , which they can then bring back to the whole group .
9 If the dieter feels she needs extra guidance or added structure to meal planning , she can always refer back to the suggested meals for good nutrition that we gave at the end of Chapter 4 .
10 However , the exhibition does not necessarily refer back to the previous event , and there is hardly ever a sense of continuing from where the previous exhibition left off .
11 It would be logical to expect an author to cite his thesis in his first related paper , so that readers could refer back to the original source .
12 It was nearly a mile of steep climbing , he knew , before he would emerge on to the open heathland where The Drover 's Arms stood .
13 Basic Stable Management , is designed as an introductory course and students could follow on to the Senior Horsemaster Course 1 and then onto the Senior Horsemasters Course 2 which is an equivalent level of study to the BHS Stage IV .
14 Sometimes during the night someone from Wouldham would run down to the opposite bank and call for the Doctor .
15 In this situation you should gradually work up to the 20-minute target .
16 You will probably find that the sander will not work up to the very edge of the floor , so you will have to hire a smaller unit to finish off the job .
17 His speech is the latest in a series which will run up to the Scottish party conference in May at which a booklet containing all his speeches will be on sale to the party faithful .
18 There are two disadvantages to this approach ; first , it is enormously time consuming and second , the polygon topology of the input coverage is not preserved , so one can not work back to the initial coverage attributes .
19 But to return to the run of the mill accident , the team will be occupied on average for about a week following which they will report back to the Chief Inspector .
20 The FO 's assessor will have a say in how the BAS spends its money and will report back to the Foreign secretary on how useful the BAS is as a political presence in the Antarctic and the south Atlantic , This move , which clearly follows from Britain 's determination to outface Argentina in the region , brings a new political backdrop to the activities of scientists in the Antarctic .
21 But then they 'd still presumably report back to the main group about what they 'd been doing .
22 All he would say was that the paper would be completely new , but would hark back to the great days of the Mirror .
23 His concerns are moral and religious , and in certain respects , therefore , although they appear to be out of line with the literary culture of Sidonius and his sixth-century followers , they do look back to the moral response which met the first wave of the barbarian invasions .
24 For instance , young and untrained sheepdogs will often spontaneously run round to the other side of a flock of sheep and try to drive them towards the shepherd .
25 A naive dog will spontaneously run round to the other side of the flock .
26 Now you can move on to the final stage of the diet .
27 I will put that on the side and just with the rest as you 're going Now I 'll move on to the financial statements .
28 Right , that 's the end of that then , so let's move on to the projected sales reports I asked for last time .
29 Let's move on to the medium-term question and get away from the perhaps the more depressing end of this time spectrum at any rate .
30 Could we move on to the constant frequency generator problems er how much do by this ?
  Next page