Example sentences of "his [noun sg] to the [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Bhattarai tendered his resignation to the King on May 14 but was asked to stay in office until the formation of a new Cabinet . |
2 | EDWARD HEATH LEAVES 10 DOWNING STREET ON 4TH MARCH 1974 TO PRESENT HIS RESIGNATION TO THE QUEEN AT BUCKINGHAM PALACE . |
3 | Sharon formally submitted his resignation to the Cabinet on Feb. 18 , and it became effective two days later . |
4 | Could it be that he was aware of Van Butchell 's intentions and saw this as a means of bringing his technique to the notice of the public , being able , at the same time , to lay any charge of indecency at Van Butchell 's door , if it arose ? |
5 | But apart from hunting , he seems to have left the business of government to his earls , although he continued to enjoy the society of churchmen , especially of foreign churchmen , gave his heart to the building of Westminster Abbey , engaged in the royal works of mercy , stood meekly through divine office and mass , and — a special note of conscientiousness — ‘ at these times , unless he was addressed , he rarely spoke to anyone ’ . |
6 | Guillem , or Guillaume de Cabestanh , or Cabestaing , or Cabestan , had loved the lady of Roussillon , Soremonde , Sermonde , or Marguerite , wife of the seigneur Raymond of Roussillon , who , in a fit of jealous rage , had the troubadour slaughtered and had served his heart to the lady in a dish . |
7 | Rassendyll accepts the plan in a spirit of adventure and with some reluctance sacrifices his beard to the need of the moment ( a practical detail which helps veracity at the right time ) . |
8 | Before that he was suspended from the national team for a year after a clash with coach Henri Michel , punished for fighting with team-mates at Auxerre and Montpelier and fined for throwing his shirt to the ground at Marseille when substituted . |
9 | ‘ … the purchaser can not avoid his liability to the auctioneer by paying the vendor direct without telling the auctioneer . |
10 | His concession to the warmth of the room has been to take off his topmost cardigan . |
11 | And he accused Mr Clarke of being ‘ cruel ’ in not revealing his decision to the family before holding a Press conference . |
12 | His vision was indissolubly linked with the social and economic life of Brazil in the Sixties and the exhibition illustrates Oiticica 's brief but complex career , showing his fidelity to the theme of the human body and its relationship to space and objects . |
13 | As early as 1746 he had pondered such a work , writing in his preface to the Ode for Musick on St. Cecilia 's Day of the ‘ fine subject … that is David 's playing to King Saul when he was troubled with the evil Spirit ’ . |
14 | The Bishop however informed him that he had no vacancy for a chaplain — a refusal which Tyndale never forgave : in his Preface to the translation of the Five Books of Moses , where he describes the incident , there is a marginal note , ‘ Room in my Lord 's house for belly-cheer but none to translate the New Testament . ’ |
15 | Alexander Pope wrote , in his preface to The Rape of the Lock ( 1712 ) : |
16 | In 1947 , Tawney in his preface to The future in Adult Education , raised many of the post-war problems facing the WEA in a changing society . |
17 | In his preface to The Castle of Otranto , Walpole states that Shakespeare is the model for his domestics , and that , although their simplicity may excite smiles , it is drawn from nature . |
18 | Yet I believe this new understanding must be included in the account , for as Blacking ( 1977 : vii ) pointed out in his preface to the Anthropology of the Body : |
19 | He owed his election to the bishopric of Coventry and Lichfield , in the January of that year ( his consecration followed in March 1258 ) , to the influence of the king 's brother , Richard , Earl of Cornwall [ q.v . ] . |
20 | This threat held serious consequences for the government of Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa , as support from the Takeshita faction had been an essential ingredient in his election to the leadership of the party , and was generally seen as essential to his continued survival in the post . |
21 | He had been sufficiently interested in imperial issues to drift into the Round Table orbit some time after his election to the House of Commons in 1910 ; and by 1916 his claims to employment were being urged on Milner at the War Office by the Round Table guru F.S. Oliver , who put him unambiguously in a class by himself , above Amery , Brand and Kerr , at the top of his list for preferment . |
22 | Mr Wilson is apparently taking his case to the Court of Appeal . |
23 | If the plaintiff appears but fails to prove his case to the satisfaction of the court , the court may nonsuit him or give judgment for the defendant ( N 289 ) ( Ord 21 , r 2(1) ) . |
24 | The association complained of obscenity and Coote brought his case to the House of Commons in an effort to persuade Sir Richard Webster , the Attorney-General , to take up the prosecution . |
25 | Applicant Mr. I. Kennedy has now taken his case to the Department of the Environment . |
26 | This means that someone must urgently bring his case to the attention of the Attorney General and ask him to look at it . |
27 | In his appendix to the History of Edinburgh Arnot states that in 1763 there was no such thing as an umbrella known or used in Edinburgh . |
28 | Skip Iain saw him and his fathe to the title by 21–16 . |
29 | It is true that he seems to have been sufficiently interested to use Wagner as the extreme example of " the demonic in music " for his Germania paper on that theme ; and also that , following his exposure to the music of Tristan , some of his own compositions of 1861 have a marked Wagnerian flavour ( in eccentric combination with formally archaic polyphony ) — but this flirtation was short-lived and not repeated until his conversion to Wagner seven years later . |
30 | He was there dealing not with summary remedies available to the state to which a citizen had no opportunity to state a defence but rather to additional consequences which might adversely affect a citizen should he fail in his defence to the claim to the principal sum . |