Example sentences of "[vb base] to [art] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Yeah , though I take the wings of morning and fly to the uttermost ends of the sea , yet thou art with me . ’ |
2 | From Los Angeles , fly to the glittering lights of Las Vegas in the Nevada Desert . |
3 | And , I say to the Chief Officers of this Authority , that their that their proposed that their proposed claim of fourteen percent is nothing short of disgraceful . |
4 | In essence the Report and the Act reject the approach of the Banking Commission : instead , both cling to the Roman-Dutch principles of mortgage . |
5 | The real problems are caused by directors who cling to the dead forms of classic Hollywood . |
6 | To bide our time and listen to the faint whispers from the tables . ’ |
7 | Support to the numerous types of group varies according to the number of members , their objectives and location ( there are supplements in the LFA ) . |
8 | They react to the latest discoveries with blasé aplomb , remaining unruffled by theological controversy . |
9 | Welcome to the heady heights of writing to the list : - ) |
10 | Wordsworth discovered and established those kinds of poetry which would best suit him ; it is in the German period that we travel to the furthest limits of the ‘ Wordsworthian ’ vision , in poems such as the ‘ Lucy ’ and ‘ Matthew ’ sequences , which are at one level blindingly clear , but in terms of prose exposition almost impossible to ‘ explain' . |
11 | The murder of Sigibert I left his son 's territories open to the military onslaughts of Chilperic and to the rather more devious guardianship undertaken by Guntram . |
12 | In the dawn , before the host came home , he would surely be presented at last with one window into his father 's spirit , and add to the many aspects of Master Harry he had borrowed from other people one at least which was his own . |
13 | Only in Kempe 's noted version on EMI ( 2/88 ) have I felt so strongly the main attributes of Lohengrin : here Robert Heger , the very epitome of the Kapellmeister manner at its best , give to the many passages of formal utterance a grandeur and intensity so often missing in studio performances , culminating in a magnificent outpouring at the final greeting to Elsa in Act 2 . |
14 | It is hopeless beauty that brings the tears to the eyes , a beauty we give to the dead hopes of our past . |
15 | You 've got to start back a long way before you get to the final decisions on costs and budgets . |
16 | ‘ I find by the time I get to the last houses on Christmas Eve , rum custard has congealed into a nasty skin , ’ he said . |
17 | The data get to the ground-based supercomputers through the TDRSS relay satellites , which can cope with more data than the SDS . |
18 | The cultivation of creativity is the most important requirement of men who aspire to the highest reaches of the transcendent world . |
19 | For precise details of keystrokes etc. , refer to the relevant pages of the ‘ Reference Guide to LIFESPAN ’ . |
20 | Most of the reported decisions were made under the provisions of the Act of 1972 but for convenience I shall throughout refer to the relevant provisions under the numbers of the sections and subsections as they appear in the Act of 1988 . |
21 | Therefore , you will need a muscle relaxant ( refer to the Therapeutic Charts in this chapter ) , sedative , anti-depressant blend such as chamomile and lavender . |
22 | In a later chapter I refer to the modern notions of witchcraft and satanism which receive such wide publicity today . |
23 | The flood story in Babylonia is also known from a Sumerian text telling virtually the same tale , though more briefly , and many Sumerian compositions refer to the distant days of the flood or before . |
24 | While the accounts of the siege of Harfleur in the late summer of 1415 refer to the time-honoured methods of mining and blockade used by the English , pride of place for effectiveness is given to their artillery , which caused both fear and destruction to the beleaguered town . |
25 | Unionist politicians frequently refer to the six counties of North-Eastern Ireland , reputed to be part of Britain , as Carson Country . |
26 | By this I refer to the acknowledged limitations on the ability to infer the contents of consciousness from any number of behavioural or physiological observations . |
27 | the change in manufacturing employment during the 1970s and 1980s is a move from Frostbelt to Sunbelt so long as ‘ frost ’ and ‘ sun ’ refer to the social conditions for profit making … . |
28 | It happens to be the case that we can not , in our language , refer to the sensible properties of a thing without introducing a word or phrase which appears to stand for the thing itself as opposed to anything which may be said about it . |
29 | By working with the NHS in this way , AA Hospital Plus can give you access to the highest standards of health care — at a very affordable monthly cost . |
30 | At that time women were still employed underground in Cumberland filling the baskets as well as at surface tasks , while the wives of Staffordshire pitmen were said seldom to " do more than attend to the necessary calls of the Family " except for helping with the harvest . |