Example sentences of "[vb past] [prep] [noun sg] to [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 However , the idea that archive work might be used in the training of embryo diplomats still surfaced from time to time in France .
2 They will want to know why we did not appreciate the inconvenience and stupidity of having to change currency constantly as one moved from country to country in the Community .
3 These men — and overwhelmingly they were men — came from large , poor families , moved from job to job in catering and manual work and were unable to save out of their meagre earnings .
4 Equally , when it came to promotion to captain in the Mediterranean fleet , interest was obviously a strong influence upon the admiral , for he remarks in July 1799 that ‘ Adam Drummond came to me yesterday .
5 The Renault shot forward and slewed from side to side in the snow as she drove fast towards the gates .
6 The warning voices raised from time to time in the journal appear to have been in the minority .
7 When you walked along it , it swung from side to side in a most terrifying fashion .
8 The rally was won outright by flying Scot Colin McRae , who led from start to finish in his Subaru Legacy .
9 Somewhere out of sight , cicadas filled the air with their high-pitched whirring and , in the distance , a woodpecker shrieked as it swooped from tree to tree in a flash of yellow , green and red .
10 When ARA famine officials went from Kazan' to Simbirsk in the autumn of 1921 , it took them four days to cover 150 miles .
11 Washington 's career went from strength to strength in the '40s and '50s , but her private life is the stuff of folklore .
12 He went from house to house in certain areas of the East End of London , painstakingly recording the number of residents , the number of rooms they occupied , their living conditions , their income , diet , clothing , and so on .
13 William Livingston ( 1818–1870 ) who apprenticed to a tailor and went from house to house in the course of his work , must have known the people well and written about their hard life .
14 William Livingston ( 1818–1870 ) who apprenticed to a tailor and went from house to house in the course of his work , must have known the people well and written about their hard life .
15 She looked from face to face in the darkness , faces that seemed to belong to hideous inquisitors , with the torch beams casting harsh angular shadows from below into their upturned faces .
16 Gabriel looked from face to face in search of some explanation .
17 But it seemed very small , much smaller and more fragile than the night before , as it swayed from side to side in the bright sunlight .
18 Ahead of them , a great crack appeared from ceiling to floor in the wall where the double-doors were set .
19 For , among other reasons , Turks did not fit into a Zuwaya genealogy ; in theory , it is possible to find all forty shaikhs who appeared from time to time in Zuwaya stories in a genealogy ( although it is only anthropologists who are sufficiently naive to ask which men were the victims and where did they fit in lists of ancestors ) .
20 Most of these , too , developed along existing paths , the paths that ran from village to village in Saxon times , though here and there they may have called for a new piece to complete the chain of paths .
21 The boat had a crew of twenty , and they laboured from dawn to dusk in two shifts to keep the clumsy craft moving against the current , poling it away from sand-bars and small , reed-covered islands .
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