Example sentences of "be [verb] [adv] [prep] [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 Let's go to see you tomorrow Other languages have PrOnominal systems much richer than the English one : in Japanese , pronouns are distinguished also with respect to sex of speaker , social status of referent and degree of intimacy with referent , so , for example , the second person pronoun kimi can be glossed " you , addressed by this intimate male speaker " ( Uyeno , 1971 : 16-17 ; Harada , 1976 : 511 ) ; and village Tamil has up to six singular second person pronouns according to degree of relative rank between speaker and addressee ( Brown & Levinson , 1978 : 3206 ) .
2 They are included only in relation to the same investments as listed institutions .
3 After exclusion of those who had been rehydrated intravenously before admission to the hospital the median duration of preoperative rehydration treatment was similar in both groups ( 21 hours in group A and 22 hours in group B ; W=35314.5 , p=0.2 ( -4.3 to 0.8 ) ) .
4 On the other hand , in the next ten units ( Saint Laurent , Chinon , and Cruas ) , the engine rooms are located radially with respect to the reactor buildings .
5 Fuchs , in an analysis of women as mothers in the Hebrew scriptures , shows how women are considered entirely in relation to the male world .
6 Dual-subject degrees exist in both the universities and polytechnics , but their place in each is subtly different ; in the former they are seen largely in relation to the single honours degree , which constitutes a kind of academic gold standard , whereas in the latter they come under the general rubric of ‘ combined studies ’ .
7 Under the leadership of Frau Gisela Klötzer and Frau Gabi Christ-Schröder , we have put together a team of students in their third semester of training who are looking forward with excitement to their performances in England .
8 Like remarks might have been made elsewhere with respect to a required event , for example .
9 As we have already mentioned , it makes no difference whether you are flying visually in relation to the natural horizon , or , solely by reference to the Artifical Horizon and Performance Instruments ; the control of your performance is exactly the same , a combination of performance and power .
10 Further , the streets serve as drying grounds in fine weather ; lines are stretched across from house to house , and hung with wet clothing .
11 Whilst Wallis ' notion of ‘ cultural defence ’ has been utilised here in addition to , rather than in place of , Gusfield 's notion of ‘ status defence ’ in accounting for the activities of the NVALA , Wallis ' explanation is perhaps not as comprehensive as it might be .
12 It was suggested in the foregoing discussion that the laxity of the duty of care can be explained partly by reference to the confidence of the courts , at least historically , in the effectiveness of shareholder control .
13 The determination by the material base having been displaced , the form of ideology ( distortion ) can no longer be explained merely by reference to contradictions in the material base although Habermas incorporates Marx 's critique of the commodity form of labour as ideology ( Habermas 1972 : 59 ) .
14 The strength of Gloucester 's hold on the duchy connection can not , however , be explained only by reference to the situation within the duchy itself .
15 The strength of Gloucester 's hold on the duchy connection can not , however , be explained only by reference to the situation within the duchy itself .
16 But all of these developments can not be explained solely by reference to what goes on inside ‘ Fleet Street ’ .
17 Details of the theories will be given briefly with attention to how successful they have proved within natural language systems .
18 Indeed the great scope for integrating walking and public transport into a new system of transport can be realised partly through attention to the interface between the modes .
19 These changes , which were limited to the big club sides , will be examined later in relation to media interest in sport .
20 Her share was not to be calculated exclusively in relation to her needs .
21 In languages with honorifics , honorific concord can thus become an intricate aspect of morphology , which can not always be treated formally without reference to the socially deictic values of particular morphemes .
22 Events before 1977 will be considered here in relation to three aspects :
23 ‘ They can not be considered only with respect to their potential ability to reduce accidents , but must be designed and evaluated while taking into account their impact on other factors capable of improving people 's ‘ feeling ’ towards the area they live in : practicability ( access , parking , orientation , etc. ) , satisfaction of basic needs of the residents ( communication , rest , play , pleasantness of the environment , etc. ) and avoidance of nuisances . ’
24 Earlier sections of this chapter have indicated the existence of recent , major changes within manufacturing in the UK economy , in the geography of manufacturing and in uneven development more widely ( for uneven development can not be considered only in relation to manufacturing — and later chapters will add to this wider picture ) .
25 The decision about whether and when to intervene in unhappy families can not be resolved simply by reference to psychological theories , nor can it be based on folk precepts about not interfering .
26 Additional allowances that can be paid include a constant attendance allowance , exceptionally severe disablement allowance , and reduced earnings supplement , which is paid to those who are unable to work in their normal occupation as a result of industrial accident or disease , and can be claimed either in addition to or separate from disablement benefit , payable where appropriate .
27 This definition was first developed and used in Chapter 2 and it can be applied directly without alteration to equities .
28 traditional grammatical structures … are not appropriate to Mayan structures : they can be applied only with violence to their common usage or to the structural features they are intended to fit …
29 The number and extent of the obligations can be ascertained only by reference to the terms expressly agreed in the contract and to those extra terms which the law automatically implied into it .
30 The choice between the two roads can not , in my opinion , be made simply by reference to binding authority .
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