Example sentences of "always be [verb] to the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The payment of the year 's charge by a single payment , that is a lump sum payment , has always been linked to the date when recovery procedures can commence in order that lump sum payers are subject to the same recovery procedures as monthly instalment payers .
2 Historically and culturally , it has always been linked to the continent .
3 He had always been drawn to the sea , as is also evinced by his poems ; at Taranto he became a keen yachtsman .
4 He wrote : ‘ All the world and the glory of it , whatever is most attractive , whatever is most seductive , has always been offered to the Prince of Wales of the day , and always will be .
5 And what 's more damaging is that everything I do now will always be compared to the past . ’
6 Although he will always be compared to the Rangers winger Willie Henderson , a diminutive showman who won the hearts of the other Glasgow , Johnstone had more than impudent skill on his side .
7 You may need to do some lateral thinking , as savings can not always be related to the size of the cheques you write out each month .
8 The type of binding chosen for any individual volume must always be related to the type and size of the book and its estimated length of retention .
9 Do n't forget that for more bulky but light loads , such as leaves , an extension can always be fitted to the top of the barrow .
10 If the parties can not agree on the terms of the mortgage , application can always be made to the court who will settle the terms of the mortgage or direct that conveyancing counsel be appointed by the court to do so .
11 Unless any cash payment is passing which is required by the husband for the purchase of another property , a contract would appear to be unnecessary and is certainly not required if the transaction is to be carried out following a court order ( whether by consent or otherwise ) as application can always be made to the court for the terms of the order to be carried out ( see Chapter 8 ) .
12 The advantage of following it and the fact that costs will not always be awarded to the respondent in any event under Ord 62 , r6(9) is illustrated by Jacobs v Wessex RHA and Hall v Wandsworth HA above .
13 One of the two argued that there were no universal jokes — that a comic 's material must always be adapted to the audience .
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