Example sentences of "he [verb] it to the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 His ‘ act as if you own the place ’ approach seemed to work , and he made it to the double doors that opened into the main tunnel complex , not even pausing as he attached a circuit board to a second brick and casually tossed it into the heart of the pile of drums on the dock nearby .
2 Three days after receiving the inspectors report , he passed it to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation .
3 The star lot , Holbein 's Lady with a Squirrel , was withdrawn two weeks ago by Lord Cholmondeley , when he sold it to the National Gallery for £10 million .
4 Davidson had of course great opportunity for influence upon Baldwin , and he used it to the full on this occasion .
5 Slipping them into a plain buff envelope , he transferred it to the inside pocket of his jacket and prepared to go out .
6 He returned it to the failed initiate without comment .
7 He raised it to the blushing Thérèse .
8 He tied it to the hanging bell rope .
9 Again , the way he applies it to the specific case of popular music poses problems : the utopian promise which , for Adorno , is the mark of great art 's autonomy is in his view relevant to popular music solely by its absence , for here , he thinks , social control of music 's meaning and function has become absolute , musical form a reified reflection of manipulative social structures ; and this moment in the historical process actually represents , in effect , the end of history — the possibility of movement by way of contradiction and critique has disappeared .
10 He applies it to the particular case of young people living with their parents after marriage , by arguing that in the expanding industrial towns there was every opportunity for young people to be wage earners and therefore to be net contributors to the parental household , at a time when wages were at a very low level .
11 One has to wonder then why he made it and how he related it to the archaic world of his plot .
12 Well , he gave it to the dirty little bugger .
13 Once he said it to the answering service .
14 He leaves it to the local man : the local man , whose tremulous reliance on a few patented drugs Hamilton observes with a speechless sneer .
15 What he has done is describe certain linguistic features of the text which distinguish it from other texts ( he refers to Yeats 's ‘ Phoenix ’ and Tennyson 's , ‘ Morte d'Arthur ’ , as well as instances of non-literary usage ) , and which look as if they may be of some literary significance ; but he leaves it to the literary specialist to determine what the nature of that literary significance is .
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