Example sentences of "[noun pl] [prep] [noun] to [noun sg] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | 8.10.4 Attractions of delay to party ultimately liable |
2 | Such considerations in relation to temperature alone have been considered in an earlier section . |
3 | Denton has classified the various forms of aid to industry under three headings : general incentives provided under various programmes to all industrial firms in all parts of the country ; industrial restructuring which again is universal in scope and geographical area and which is intended to encourage industrial efficiency ; and regional aid which is limited to firms in the deprived regions of the country . |
4 | And consequently , er the blockade did have er did have serious er serious consequences for the imports in relation to food etcetera , that er that were required by the er by the republican government . |
5 | Since , in many tribal societies , women were either pregnant or nursing during most of their fertile period of life , this monthly menstrual withdrawal did not affect women 's lives from month to month as much as it might seem to us today . |
6 | Aircraft are late and the company has ’ borrowed ’ more than 600 workers from Lockheed to catch up . |
7 | International markets , the EC and the New European Economic Area in particular , are seen by many as key expansion areas , and Society efforts to remove regulations restricting the rights of solicitors to practice abroad continued . |
8 | According to Sheila Sisulu of the South African Council of Churches , the DET 's strategy has largely involved shifting resources from place to place rather than substantially expanding the system . |
9 | For professional staff , qualification courses form a minority of the programmes undertaken , though suggested changes in routes to Fellowship currently being debated , may alter the balance of qualification-related/non-qualification training . |
10 | Our aim is to transport goods from site to site so that requirements are fulfilled from the stocks available at other sites . |
11 | They wear these muzzles from time to time so that they become accustomed to the restrictions imposed upon them . |
12 | Though flowers may more often be purple than blue , it makes sense to try blue coloured objects from time to time rather than to concentrate exclusively on purple . |
13 | As a consequence it would appear that ‘ strikes are often the most practical means of renouncing an agreement ’ ( Sellier , 1978 , p. 222 ) , although recently there have been attempts in France to institute more regularised collective relationships . |
14 | It has always been my belief that a class of our type needs to review its rules from time to time so as not to become outdated . |
15 | They prefer them mainly because they face regulations that reward stable growth in returns from year to year rather than the more volatile — but , in the long-run , almost certainly higher — returns they would earn by holding more equities . |
16 | ‘ One of them places where they have rooms for drivers to kip down for the night . |
17 | Hence : ‘ Many now forget that the rules of most sports were framed in Victorian times without resort to enforcement then ‘ in ’ , and were n't prison sentences then stiffer ? |
18 | Critics of opponents to development frequently accuse them of being blinded by nostalgia and motivated by personal vested interest . |
19 | The sale of important Attic vases on 28 April is one of the last major twentieth-century collections in private hands of sixth- to fifth-century BC vases likely to be dispersed . |
20 | If these are painted black , bees orientate their dances with respect to gravity even in bright light . |
21 | The parries in opposition to Government now decided to infiltrate the police and also to influence government servants . |
22 | Higher social groups appeared to make more use of health services in relation to need however ( Brotherston 1976 ; Forster 1976 ) and research published shortly after the Black Report argued that they also obtained a disproportionate share of NHS resources when ill ( Le Grand 1982 ) . |