Example sentences of "[vb mod] [adv] [verb] to [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 However , while the resolution of the immediate crises in the user 's life and the provision of a counselling service to help users think objectively about their position may provide the ‘ ideal conditions ’ for coming off , users must still come to terms with their addiction , their lifestyle and whether the alternatives on offer hold sufficient promise .
2 Local authorities must also respond to requests for information from a variety of interested groups .
3 If symptoms and cognitive function were not dissociable then clozapine , noted for improving symptoms , should also lead to improvements in cognitive function .
4 In this case the price is extracted from the reader who must periodically adjust to inhomogeneities in the interpretation of key terms ; subject areas ; and the depth of coverage .
5 I think he 'll probably go to Tramps to be quite honest .
6 For instance , a student who entered the University intending to take the Honours MA in Sociology , and did Sociology 1 , Social Policy 1 and Politics 1 in first year , might then proceed to Honours in Sociology , Social Policy and Politics , or Politics , or to a BSc(SocSci) curriculum with one of these three providing the ‘ treble ’ subject .
7 I 'll never come to terms with it .
8 It will be noted that section 37(3) refers to ‘ assets located within that jurisdiction ’ , a reference which reflects , but does not directly confirm , the understanding of the position which prevailed in 1981 , that an injunction could only attach to assets within England and Wales .
9 As the hon. and learned Member for Burton said , that reversal could easily lead to miscarriages of justice that we could sort out now .
10 Confusion between the sources of faunal diversity could easily lead to mistakes in interpreting its meaning .
11 They may not be used extensively now , but countries could easily turn to halons as a replacement for some CFCs .
12 He 'd gradually come to terms with the fairly obvious fact ( as most of his comrades already had ) that wartime associations were almost inevitably doomed to dissolution .
13 Many came to the door attempting to sell brushes , polish and so on , often carrying a card from the firm employing them explaining that they were disabled servicemen , I tremble to think that we could ever return to conditions like these .
14 However , it could also apply to parents in the ‘ leafy suburbs ’ , particularly in June , when older pupils could convince their parents that ‘ nothing much was happening ’ at school and persuade them to condone non-attendance .
15 If wider costs were to be considered , one could also look to savings from reduced pollution , energy consumption and accident rates , quite apart from the health maintenance benefits of a walking population .
16 The architect who could now travel to sites on a steam train and use technical terms and modern scaffolding had a different relationship with the client , who was more informed about what he wanted in the way of a new house in the country .
17 I started up WordStar full of apprehension , thinking I 'd never get to grips with all those cryptic keystroke shortcuts .
18 His mount put in a series of sticky jumps and could never get to grips with Twin Oaks , who made all and came home clear for his eighth win over fences at the Lancashire course .
19 I could never come to terms with the Big Idea .
20 On a more subjective level social isolation may also refer to feelings of loneliness and concerns about the quality and quantity of social contacts .
21 Activity-induced changes in the morphology or number of spines may also contribute to changes in synaptic efficiency , as suggested by a number of electron-microscopic studies .
22 Plying this area with yet more oil , in the form of creamy cleansers and heavy moisturisers , will exacerbate the problem of excessive shine , and may also contribute to outbreaks of spots .
23 Now I I mentioned some of the things on income tax where i know it does n't er apply to the people in the group but may well do to relatives of them .
24 These differences in motivation would naturally lead to differences in formulations of objectives by the various groups .
25 For this , those feminists , such as Finch and Groves ( 1983 ) , who espoused the cause of their older sisters , can take some credit , particularly in the challenge they threw down to those who assumed without question that such roles would naturally fall to women on their own .
26 Some aspects of the present situation such as urban unemployment and the evolution of communication and educational technology are important because they may lead to changes in educational systems which would coincidentally lead to changes in development .
27 The same approach would also apply to contracts of supply such as bailment and contracts of hire .
28 Although it is not clear that subjective risk can be biased in this way theories of driving which stress a schematic or conceptual representation of the environment ( e.g. Dubois , 1991 ; Fleury , Mazet & Dubois , 1988 ; Groeger , 1988 , 1989 ; Riemersma , 1988 ) might suggest that biases in the perception of the environment would indirectly lead to biases in subjective risk , either because risk is an important aspect of such schemata or because subjective risk would result from the inconsistency between the environment and pre-existing schemata .
29 There was no initial prospect of romance between her and Ian , but it was suggested her admiration for the man would sometimes lead to under-currents of antagonism between her and Susan .
30 These include the development of trade practices which become implied terms of the contract , the use of exclusion clauses purporting to modify or exclude particular duties , and the making of advance disclosure of particular activities which would otherwise amount to breaches of duty .
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