Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] [adv] to the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The search for new policies led additionally to the widespread adoption of monetary targets in most economies , including the UK , apparently giving some acceptance of the monetarist claim that inflation is a consequence of a rapid growth in the money supply .
2 The work of solicitors goes back to the 15th century and as time has gone on they have become increasingly influential .
3 These signals correspond precisely to the characteristic vibrations of the molecule .
4 Some of his compositions are based on songs dating back to the mid-fifteenth century .
5 And in the library there is a more recent collection of men 's pin-up books dating back to the Fifties .
6 This paper presents results for eighteen clients accepted on to the Special Development Team caseload , who were living in NHS mental handicap hospitals at the time of referral , eleven of whom had moved to staffed houses in the community .
7 Neither of the three potential ATG translation initiation sequences matched exactly to the extended Kozak consensus ( ccAcc ATG G [ 22 ] .
8 This important collection increases the Museum 's geographical and subject coverage and comprises of approximately 70,000 images including views of locomotives , rolling stock , moving trains , railway architecture and civil engineering subjects dating back to the early 1900's .
9 The debates over the merger had precipitated a number of leadership changes in the old parties and alliances in the months leading up to the final agreement .
10 Apart from the contributions they both made to raising the general temperature along the international border in the months leading up to the Iraqi onslaught in September 1980 , the first blow appears to have been struck in the same month by Baghdad with a broadcast announcement of the death of Ayatollah Khomeini.i The Iraqis had previously given a trial outing to a line of attack which underwent persistent repetition as the war proceeded .
11 Beyond the car park , the road contours the hillside , two branches going down to the coastal dwellings of Inver Alligin , and then turns sharply uphill to force a narrow passage across a bare and rocky headland on the last stage of its journey .
12 The local heats take place at Acklam Sports Centre on Wednesday and Thursday , July 29 and 30 with the winners going on to the regional final on August 5 .
13 ‘ Tell me about Jules , ’ he said as they approached the stone steps leading up to the arched doorway into the château .
14 The slope in this new garden is to be terraced around a circular lawn with steps leading up to the higher level .
15 The ground level appeared to be slightly higher than he remembered and there was no sign of the seven semi-circular steps leading up to the front door .
16 When he reached the steps leading up to the front door of the Guild Office , he found the place in darkness , with no sign of life .
17 Asa braked at the foot of broad steps leading up to the front entrance , walls and towers rising above them .
18 The village is situated on a very steep hillside with steps leading up to the next row of houses .
19 The alley ended abruptly in a couple of steps leading down to the sluggish black waters of a canal .
20 She was at the top of the steps leading down to the front door of the Moebius Strip .
21 Even her little house was somehow in keeping with this picture , although it was definitely not St John 's Wood and there was no delicate wrought iron balcony with steps leading down to the green garden .
22 Across the back of the house was a kitchen , a bathroom and a big breakfast room with steps leading down to the back garden .
23 When he peeped through the gap he could see the big half-pillars supporting the lintel , the rounded stone steps leading down to the paved walkway and the wilderness of garden beyond .
24 The research identifies the areas in which they have survived in sufficient abundance to form the basis of a nationwide sample survey designed to illustrate changes in the level , composition and distribution of household wealth in the centuries leading up to the Industrial Revolution .
25 ‘ Yes of course , ’ said Taliesin , his eyes going also to the motionless figure , because it was certainly unthinkable that they should leave Fergus like this , in the middle of a dark old mansion at the heart of an ancient forest .
26 She looked up sharply , her eyes going immediately to the far shore and to the house on the crest above the cove .
27 Your eyes drawn down to the bitter earth .
28 The listeners tuned in to the German wavelengths because they found Joyce amusing unintentionally or for his anecdotes , or else because they wished to hear both sides of the argument , or even because they did not trust their own authorities to tell them the whole truth .
29 The study , ‘ Made in Britain : the true state of British manufacturing industry ’ , is a joint project by IBM Consulting Group and London Business School to test whether British manufacturers measure up to the best in the world .
30 Hormones pass back to the pituitary gland , regulating its sexual function .
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