Example sentences of "[vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 Mr Beesley said : ‘ We shall be asking the Government to ensure that BAe supplies the necessary information to the buy-out team to enable a formal offer to be made . ’
2 Mr Beesley said : ‘ We shall be asking the Government to ensure that BAe supplies the necessary information to the buy-out team to enable a formal offer to be made . ’
3 This type of system requires two cold water cisterns : the normal one which supplies the cold feed to the hot water cylinder ( the ‘ secondary ’ circuit ) ; the other a feed-and-expansion cistern for supplying the ‘ primary ’ boiler circuit .
4 The CAP was designed to help the EC 's 14 million farmers : instead , it promotes inefficient farmers at the expense of the efficient UK farmer , destroys the international market to the detriment of the Third World and cheats EC taxpayers .
5 This latter then circulates the fixed nitrogen to the rest of the plant .
6 It is obvious that a pretty problem arises when the test of domicile refers the English courts to the law of a country which applies the test of citizenship and it happens that the citizenship of the person in question was British .
7 This represents the literal approach to the construction of the section , which stipulates simply that the court , ‘ after hearing the evidence and the parties , shall convict the accused or dismiss the information . ’
8 Perhaps the most interesting theory states that the physical door-hanging represents the spiritual doorway to the Islamic heaven , which has four gardens at its innermost core .
9 S. Sophia represents the eastern approach to the architectural form , in Constantinople and S. Mark the western , in Venice .
10 The bank then transfers the appropriate amounts to the creditors ' banks , and deducts the total amount paid from the trader 's account .
11 He juxtaposes two or more negatives in a single frame or , again superimposing different shots , transfers the printed photograph to a large canvas backing using a computer able to read a positive image and reproduce it in polychrome .
12 Censorship only exposes the offending article to a greater public .
13 Censorship only exposes the offending article to a greater public .
14 It exposes the grim underbelly to the sentimental images captured by the town 's celebrated photographer Frank Sutcliffe .
15 The call-slip , which is in duplicate , is then transmitted to the shelf where the item is located , and its top copy is left on the shelf , while its second copy accompanies the requested item to the Reading ( or to the South Reading Room via the Reading Room ) .
16 On the other hand , loan stock has the following advantages to the offeror :
17 Before that it was in a similar condition to the cottage next door which has the original entrance to the spa .
18 English Open strokeplay champion Ignacio Garrido heads the international challenge to an event which has produced winners such as Brian Barnes , Peter Townsend and more recently Jose Maria Olazabal .
19 Interestingly , Paolucci in his translation of Beccaria ( 1963 , p. 74 ) ( not the one used by Taylor , Walton and Young ) adds the following footnote to the above passage :
20 4.00pm Linda adds the final touch to the swill roll .
21 The front of the ski needs the opposite virtues to the back : wider , softer and more of it .
22 Having spoken , the monk undergoes a physical reaction to the utterance of his salacious thoughts of the wife being exercised , sexually , in bed : This response to his own thought and speech on the monk 's part creates another novelty within this fabliau : a character who assumes a role parallel to that of a real reader outside the text ; a listener to and responder to a text and its implications , and what is more a reader who indulges in an interpretation of the text of his thoughts as pornographic , i.e. capable of exciting vicarious , erotic sensation .
23 But behind this couthy , amiable exterior lies a strong commitment to the service and a firm determination to get things done .
24 But its modern standing owes a surprising amount to the British , who gave Pau a great lift in the nineteenth century .
25 Obviously , contemporary interest in Leapor owes a great deal to a general shift in eighteenth century studies .
26 Its present appearance today owes a great deal to the Duke of Marlborough who in 1704 remodelled the town .
27 All these changes fall well within the observation that ‘ political activity in its contemporary form ’ owes a great deal to the existence and practices of the mass media .
28 This family of views , which derives from many of the same commitments as its predecessors , but owes a great deal to the development of the computer , has among others the rather unenlightening labels functionalism , cognitive science , cognitive psychology , and artificial intelligence-several of which labels obviously have other uses .
29 Clearly the improvement of the unemployment situation in Scotland during the 1970s owes a great deal to the new employment opportunities created by the discovery of North Sea oil , whereas the political troubles in Ireland have had an adverse effect on the local employment situation there .
30 Clearly , the special character of the National Health Service structure owes a great deal to the strength of special interests , though its reorganization in the 1970s owed much to ‘ managerial ’ thinking .
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