Example sentences of "to [pron] i [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 John replying to these resolutions on behalf of the C E C. Before I kick off I to reply to them I put at the top of my scribbled notes three words poverty hardship and loneliness and I think those three words typify and sum up what the majority of these resolutions are all about in this retarded society that we 've lived in er under in the last fourteen years .
2 but to me I look at the , I call patterned carpets all the flowers and
3 As a result of what one of the men ( the witness ) John Smith said to me I spoke to the accused etc . ’
4 To everyone I know under the age of 35 , it is prehistory .
5 The answers to these questions will be found in the analysis of cultural-ideological transnational practices and , in particular , the culture-ideology of consumerism in the Third World , to which I turn in the next chapter .
6 Perhaps these contradictory interpretations illustrate the dangers , to which I alluded in the earlier discussion , of assuming an automatic association between classicism and positivism and specific political ideologies .
7 This case is the first of the modern Court of Appeal authorities to which I referred at the beginning of this judgment .
8 What is important is the unequivocal , but in my respectful opinion wrong , statement of the law made by Viscount Dilhorne , at p. 632a ( to which I referred at the outset of my speech ) , that Parliament by omitting the words ‘ without the consent of the owner ’ from section 1(1) of the Act of 1968 ‘ has relieved the prosecution of the burden of establishing that the taking was without the owner 's consent . ’
9 It 's , I , recur here to something I said in the broadcast I did earlier in this series , that a British national characteristic which distinguishes us very much from every Continental country , is our erm phobia about committing money and means to the state to spend for our common good .
10 The New English Weekly article was a follow-up to one I wrote about the abdication crisis .
11 So what we , we need to go to him I think in the first instance and say we want to do X Y and Z , and if he , if he says fine you know .
12 I meant to be open with him but when it came to it I beat about the bush .
13 Some theft cases can be prosecuted under section 15 , but it is fallacious , having regard to what I perceive as the true meaning of appropriation , to say that all cases of obtaining by deception can be prosecuted under section 1 .
14 I imagine the experience of unease mixed with exhilaration often described in connection with this moment is very similar to what I felt in the Ford as the surroundings grew strange around me .
15 I now come to what I regard as the plaintiffs ' most convincing argument , namely , that paragraph 33 of Buckley J. 's order , combined with the letter dated 23 October 1991 from the Crown Prosecution Service , provides effective protection for the defendants against the criminal consequences of having to disclose incriminating information or documents by virtue of paragraphs 18(a) and ( c ) and 19(a) and ( c ) of the order .
16 I refer to what I regard as the Labour party 's organised disruption of yesterday 's debate .
17 The second relates to what I said about the evaporation/solar-flares analogy being an external relation .
18 I go back to what I say in the beginning .
19 Referring back to what I see as the purpose behind the whole practice , I have called it ‘ archaeo-astrology ’ .
20 I come back finally to what I mentioned at the beginning of this chapter as the area of ‘ naturalism ’ more broadly conceived : that is to say , the question of founding human ethics on considerations of human nature , in some way which goes beyond merely respecting the limits , biological or other , on what human beings are able to do .
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