Example sentences of "from [noun sg] to [noun] [coord] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Traditional models consist of the transfer of information from one person to another , for example , from user to designer and from manager to designer .
2 The service runs from Easter to November and on winter weekends .
3 Second , the 20 years from the mid-fifties provided a period of only marginal differences in programmes both from election to election and between the parties .
4 For every long contract to which it becomes party there is a matching short , for every dispute with a seller ( though disputes are so rare as virtually never to occur ) there will be an equal dispute with a buyer , and for every case of force majeure in delivery there will be an invoicing back from buyer to LCH and from LCH to seller .
5 The fighting there is from building to building and at night , often hand-to-hand with knives .
6 I trudged back to the city centre and tried to have a look around the main shopping district , forced to sprint squelchily from doorway to doorway and from one dripping awning to another ; but it was hopeless .
7 Desks in lines , streamed classes , sets of identical textbooks through which children move from term to term and from year to year all serve to confirm a particular belief .
8 Pages are written closely and amorphously from side to side and from top to bottom .
9 Judicial views on this matter are likely to vary from judge to judge and from time to time : some judges favour more rather than less judicial review ; others less rather than more .
10 It may be that one day we shall discover a complete unified theory that predicts them all , but it is also possible that some or all of them vary from universe to universe or within a single universe .
11 Fees vary from degree to degree and from subject to subject .
12 Shortly afterwards a wide range of new channels offered viewers a greater choice of television programmes from sport to movies and from news to music .
13 On this basis it will be possible to describe changes in employment patterns , and in the relative importance of different ‘ pathways from work to non-work and of different forms of non-working ( eg , unemployment , disability , retirement ) , according to such factors as previous industry , social class , sex , marital status , health and closeness to ‘ normal ’ retirement age .
14 Whether you want to change your personality from night to day , from work to play or from mother to managing director , the way you wear your hair speaks more clearly than your clothes do .
15 Variations obviously occur from village to village and from area to area , so that no claim is made that what follows in this chapter applies to each and every village in England .
16 Two simple planes connect the sunken eye socket to the forehead , and a small disk extends below from cheekbone to the inside corner of the eye , while the jaw , the nose and the section from nose to mouth and from mouth to chin are each clearly defined .
17 Perhaps incest is even more closely a matter of social norms than paedophilia ; its proscription or permissibility has been and is highly variable from period to period and in different sub-cultures within our own country , let alone others .
18 In less extreme circumstances others were expressing concern that the holding of information and its transmission from teacher to teacher and from school to school might unfairly label and prejudice a child .
19 In default of a totally homogenised society , it is impossible to imagine a situation where there will not be variation from school to school , from teacher to teacher and from children to children .
20 What is appropriate will , naturally , vary from job to job and from country to country .
21 Individual risks vary greatly from job to job and from industry to industry .
22 In Chapter 7 we discuss how , once initiated , incidence spreads from township to township and via personal relationships within the illicit economy .
23 This period coincided with various socioeconomic advances which could also be usefully recorded , such as the change from horsepower to mechanisation and from an all-male workforce to a female civilian one .
24 This period coincided with various socioeconomic advances which could also be usefully recorded , such as the change from horsepower to mechanisation and from an all-male workforce to a female civilian one .
25 ’ In the case of motor vehicles those purposes include , not merely the purpose of driving it from place to place but of doing so with the appropriate degree of comfort , ease of handling and pride in the vehicle 's outward and interior appearance .
26 The number of youngsters sniffing varies from place to place and at different times .
27 The history consisted of genealogies ( which were different in their emphases and resonances from place to place and from person to person ) and of anecdotes , poems , stories , all of which were similarly variable .
28 What this meant varied greatly from place to place and from time to time ; nor can we make any satisfactory generalizations about the nature of medieval law .
29 ‘ Crimes ’ varied from place to place and from time-period to time-period ; they reflected the interests , moral concerns and ideological positions of those who were in the power positions that defined and enforced them .
30 The rules and institutions which regulated medieval agriculture and ordered rural society differed in almost every particular from place to place and from generation to generation .
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