Example sentences of "we [verb] [verb] [prep] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Although this is a drastic comparison it is still worth bearing in mind , especially when we begin to pass from youth to maturity .
2 ‘ Although this is a drastic comparison it is still worth bearing in mind , especially when we begin to pass from youth to maturity .
3 We 've gone from strength to strength from there qualifying for last year 's UK Team Chase Championships .
4 I mean obviously since we was established in nineteen eighty three we 've gone from strength to strength , and the only way that any company can do that is by offering good service all round .
5 Hello there … this week we 've come to France to the town of Chalon sur Soane for one of the most dramatic one of of the most dangerous of summer sports … that 's powerboating …
6 Next we 've got from RADA to the start of Pemberley ; that goes up to there . ’
7 The fullest enjoyment of Giorgione 's altarpiece could , he claimed , only be realised if we had walked from Venice to Castelfranco
8 The fullest enjoyment of Giorgione 's altarpiece could , he claimed , only be realised if we had walked from Venice to Castelfranco .
9 We had come to Rangkul to film bar-headed geese for the forthcoming BBC2 series Realms of the Russian Bear .
10 In a few hundreds , or at most thousands , of years we have gone from wolf to Pekinese , Bulldog , Chihuahua and Saint Bernard .
11 Does he also agree that , where he has extended the competence of the institutions of the European Community , we shall increasingly see , as we have seen in relation to Sunday trading and British Aerospace , the emergence of two forms of law — first , British law , which we encourage the population to obey and honour , and , secondly , European law , which we try to avoid — and thus we shall succeed in undermining the rule of law here ?
12 Yet , as we have seen by reference to epistolary theory in the Renaissance , the Sonnets are I utterances which receive no replies .
13 But then we have to move with Ulysses to a huge spinning-top of words which defies such judgements and leaves us clutching at apparently familiar images which so sooner appear than they are gone .
14 We have moved from consensus to conflict in politics : have we moved in that direction , too , as regards our constitutional order , taking that to mean the broad principles underlying the way government is organised and power exercised ?
15 However , we would emphasise again that many of the points we have made in relation to natural law and rights theories apply with equal force to arguments based on the rhetoric of the rule of law .
16 Secondly , we have increased from £1,000 to £2,000 the charge under the Immigration ( Carriers ' Liability ) Act 1987 for bringing improperly documented passengers to Britain .
17 So that 's what we have to check from time to time .
18 ( This is the perspective we have discussed in relation to Handy and others ) .
19 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love brother Christians ’ ( 3:13f ) .
20 Les on the rigged markets , and I think this go goes to the heart of the problem in relation to the difficulties that we have in relation to coal , the problems in relation to pits , and everything in relation to the whole campaign and what we need to campaign in relation to erm er energy policy and this is absolutely crucial not only for our members within the Energy and Utility Section but for our membership and for their families throughout er throughout the country .
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