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

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1 It has been SCOTVEC 's consistent view that centres can not only prepare students/trainees to the level of occupational competence , but can also model the requirements of the workplace .
2 They could only speak Greek to the Romans , and it was for the Romans to decide whether they wanted an interpreter .
3 But the divine message will only bring gloom to the Greens .
4 In fact , the text can only give bones to the story .
5 Yet literature can only give access to the values entertained by the members of literate communities and in these only for persons able to apprehend what they read .
6 The fact that his life is totally unrecorded until 866 need not suggest that Ermentrude 's own influence was limited , but shows that a royal marriage did not necessarily bring honours to the bride 's close kinsmen .
7 This difference would necessarily secure traffic to the Railway , and by cheapening the cost would increase the consumption .
8 Like so many of the films that were to be made during the Second World War , The Four Just Men does n't only draw attention to the nature of the enemy ; it also presents an evocative picture of just what it is that is under threat — ‘ all the roads and rivers , fields add woods and hills that make up this funny old island . ’
9 One can merely draw attention to the problem here , for local arrangements were complex and varied .
10 Rachaela could only take Ruth to the school in the mornings ; at least she saw her to the gates .
11 In May , 1992 , the regional health authority informed Riverside Health Authority ( the district health authority ) that the unit 's transfer was being reconsidered and it could only commit capital to the unit if the case load was increased and if the unit could withstand a reduction of charitable funding .
12 Others certainly did : Metternich remarked , ‘ in the great Confederation , there is arising a smaller union , a status in statu in the full sense of the term , which will only too soon accustom itself to achieve its own ends by its own machinery … and will only pay attention to the objects and machinery of the Confederation insofar as they are compatible with the former ’ .
13 But the mass media do not single-handedly give shape to the contours of the political system .
14 The reasonableness test is for the tribunal to consider , though both parties will normally make representations to the tribunal on this issue .
15 To this end , the semantic net must itself convey a meaningful model of the world or must somehow present patterns to the user that are easily understood .
16 If cells from the region of the early embryo that will normally give rise to the eye are grafted into the region that will form the gut the cells do not form an eye any more but just part of the gut .
17 The court should thus give effect to the rules wherever possible , while at the same time seeking to avoid legalistic interpretation , particularly if this produces arbitrary or irrational results .
18 Such an agreement could easily give rise to the inference that they intended the passing of property to be similarly postponed ( see Underwood v. Burgh Castle Brick & cement Syndicate , above ) .
19 And then I would just draw attention to the proposals .
20 Would you hold on a moment I 'll just get Margaret to the phone cos she really deals with the bookings hold on a second !
21 This would give double the required output voltage which could easily cause damage to the power supply components and beyond .
22 We can usually make visits to the set and take our own pictures .
23 No brief summary can possibly do justice to the depth of the analysis ; but it has already been tried out on some uncommonly hard-nosed customers , and elicited their approbation .
24 In any proceeding in which no pre-trial review has been fixed , the district judge may nonetheless give notice to the parties requiring them to appear before him on the day named in the notice , so that the question of giving directions may be considered ( Ord 17 , rr 10 and 11(4) ) .
25 An existing right is one where the landlord can not unreasonably withhold consent to the tenant 's exercise of the right , or where the tenant does not need consent but must meet the landlord 's costs .
26 A summary can hardly do justice to the corpus as a whole , but it is easy enough to point to the settlement 's principal weaknesses .
27 But then it is only a presumption ; and , as such , it must always give way to the language used if it is clear , and also to all counter presumptions which may legitimately be had in view in determining , on ordinary principles , the true meaning and intent of the legislation .
28 This would at once limit access to the city by private vehicles and improve access for buses and coaches .
29 And if you move to a new house , remember that other people may still have keys to the premises — fit new locks , and use them !
30 This sliding-scale approach might still have relevance to the Post Office Act , on which that case turned , but it has little to do with obscenity as defined in the 1959 Act .
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