Example sentences of "to bring [adv] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 To assist with the addressing of this problem and to get some consistency into the approach it is intended to bring together the experience gained , so far , in the form of small manuals and guidelines .
2 The King — ( He pushes forward the POISONER/KING tormented by guilt — haunted by fear — decides to despatch his nephew to England — and entrusts his undertaking to two smiling accomplices — friends — courtiers — to two spies — ( He has swung round to bring together the POISONER/KING and the two cloaked TRAGEDIANS ; the latter kneel and accept a scroll from the KING. ) — giving them a letter to present to the English court !
3 Next month there 's going to be an international conference around reproductive technologies and genetic engineering specifically to bring together the work that women in India are doing against sterilization abuse and population control with the work the women in the West are doing around genetic experimentation and invitro fertilization and egg farming — some of the anti-women scientific advances .
4 This enabled him to bring together the Judaism of his upbringing and the Roman Catholicism and Anglo-Saxon Protestantism in which it was set in Montreal ; the former dominating of course .
5 Mauroy had been unable , since his election in March 1990 [ see p. 37330 ] , to bring together the party 's three main factions , headed respectively by Education Minister Lionel Jospin , by Fabius , and by former Prime Minister Michel Rocard .
6 A joint statement issued in London on Sept. 28 after talks between Brooke and the Social Democratic and Labour Party ( SDLP ) warned that if no new formula could be found within a month to bring together the nationalist and Unionist parties on the constitutional future of Northern Ireland , the initiative would have to be abandoned .
7 In CITY OF JOY ( Cert 12 ; General ) , director Roland Joffe tries to bring home the pride and dignity of people existing in the meanest of mean streets .
8 Centrepiece of the Welsh Plant Breeding Station 's exhibit was an ingenious model to bring home the pollution timebomb ticking away in silage storage areas .
9 Everyone knows the Triangular Trade is guaranteed to bring home the gold .
10 Lowe was in Auckland promoting a video of his life and times — inevitably referring to him as a ‘ master coach ’ which is now becoming one of the more boring sporting clichés — and was asked what he thought of the All Blacks ' failure to bring home the Cup .
11 This year 's Christian Aid slogan , the quirky ‘ Soak the Poor ’ , intended to bring home the point that drought is a prime cause of privation in underdeveloped countries .
12 To bring home the bacon for the larder .
13 That was the motivation to bring home the bacon , even if it was only Spam . ’
14 Local boys Hong Kong made good their pledge to bring home the bacon for retiring coach Jim Rowark .
15 You do n't have to be high tech , even in a high tech industry , to bring home the bacon , and Lion Cabinets Ltd of Leeds repeated its 1991 success with yet another award for the export of its mild steel enclosures and mountings for computer peripherals to the US , Germany , Italy and Israel .
16 FC Copenhagen will have identical twins hoping to bring home the bacon when the Danes come to town for Thursday 's European Cup encounter .
17 The way to make NoS popular was to put lots of people in it They could be used to bring home the sort of things which should be exposed and campaigned about in the paper — like housing conditions , or unemployment .
18 By early June the failure of an inquiry by Sir Edward Clark and of a group of ministers headed by Lloyd George to persuade the employers to agree to recognise the Federation and to negotiate with it on a joint board , began to bring nearer the prospect that the Transport Workers ' Federation National Executive would implement a recommendation by its Annual Conference that unless the joint board proposal was accepted a national strike would be declared .
19 With the government insisting on cutting back sulphur emissions from Scottish power stations , the company is likely to bring forward the opening date of the station by several years to 1992-93 .
20 At some point in the second half of next year , and perhaps even earlier if President Mitterrand decides to bring forward the abolition of French controls , the Government is going to be faced with an inescapable decision .
21 Helen and Tony were in the kitchen with the rest of the family when she reached home , all excitedly planning to bring forward the wedding to the first Saturday in October .
22 He praised Mr Michael Heseltine , environment secretary , for trying to bring forward the target date for reduction of carbon monoxide emissions .
23 He complained the decision to bring forward the start date for the £10 million sun sea and sex drama from September to July left him high and dry .
24 The object of orders for discovery under the Supreme Court and County Courts Acts is to bring forward the time for the disclosure of relevant documents in a personal injury action by , to use the wording of RSC Ord 24 , r7A , a " likely " party from the stage after action to the stage before action , and to require disclosure after the commencement of proceedings by someone who is not a party to the proceedings at all , eg , a health authority ( Walker v Eli Lilley & Co ( 1986 ) The Times , 1 May ) .
25 The next move was to bring forward the draft of the new constitution : the first that the Secretary of State knew of this was when he read a report in The Times ( 20 May ) headed ‘ A Republic of Burma ’ .
26 A resolution passed overwhelmingly empowers the republican government — which has effectively taken charge since the disintegration of Soviet central authority after the failed coup in August — to close the second reactor immediately and to bring forward the closure of the whole complex from 1995 to 1993 .
27 It is to be hoped that everything possible is being done to bring forward the safety regime as quickly as possible .
28 Demands to bring forward the age of retirement come to the fore ; for older people to continue working is seen to be selfish , depriving younger people of opportunity .
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