Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 The highly experienced management and staff of Perkins Slade , under the leadership of Mr David Slade , bring anew dimension to the Birmingham Midshires Group and we aim to develop further professional brokerage services to companies and individuals .
2 The accountant will try to ensure that the band have given enough thought to how long this money is likely to last , and how best to use it until the next payment or earnings are due .
3 But housing experts and governments just have not given enough thought to the type of building materials that developing countries need .
4 What kind of ‘ authority ’ will you be representing and have you given enough thought to conveying it in a non-threatening way ?
5 Yes , the answers and comments of the students and your fellow-teachers will certainly be valuable to the project — they were helpful , interesting , and in quite a few cases enlightening in bringing up incidental considerations I had n't previously given enough thought to .
6 I was really pleased to get so much in the way of useful comment and feedback — a lot of it bringing up incidental considerations that we clearly have n't yet given enough thought to .
7 Even with such opportunities as the Bill presents to get cases into the Crown court , where the offence involves only damage to vehicles or property — the vast bulk of cases — it is the value of the damage to property , as set out in clause 2 , that is the criterion , not the extent of the nuisance and danger , although that is the real problem with which we need to get to grips .
8 Even the Sioux Indians immortalised in Dances With Wolves are angry because it will divert money from their bingo halls which bring in revenue to poor reservations .
9 A great deal of Thomas 's trade had passed through the hands of Spencer Grenfell who seemed to have trouble bringing in payment to her father on time .
10 Sociologists of religion frequently appear inexcusably reductionist to those whom they study .
11 This liability would only be avoided if careful records of the sources of drugs were kept so as to pass on liability to the manufacturer responsible for any defect .
12 They had these cab-drivers in Israel using taxi frequencies to pass on intelligence to Cyprus , and as it came in , so they 'd pass it up the line to the PLO office in Nicosia .
13 It can further be used to keep all members of the community informed , and to pass on information to other pressure groups and the general public .
14 ‘ I will act as a conduit to pass on information to the OFT , but only the OFT has the power to amend its report . ’
15 I ask , when the wife died intestate and her estate was to pass on intestacy to her brother , whether the sister 's sons can claim a trust from him .
16 By er failing even once to meet a reasonable demand for a for something to eat in a short period of time , then there 's a knock on effect to our business .
17 He devoted much thought to the shape of the future church .
18 the window size or the kitchen size or the bathroom size , they ca n't price things out until such times as they 've sat down face to face with client .
19 Use this where your employee has not entitlement to SSP or where that entitlement has run out but he or she is still sick .
20 From the summit descend steeply north-west to Bwlch Eryl Farchog .
21 Like Camdessus , Conable urged creditor nations to write off debt to the poorest nations [ see also p. 37731 for LDC conference in Paris ] and claimed that a 10 per cent cut in military spending by members of NATO would free enough resources to double development assistance .
22 Wimbledon followed suit a little later by opening up competition to professional tennis players .
23 He was one of the pioneers in opening up archaeology to everyone , both through his books and through radio and television appearances .
24 Fish build up resistance to nitrates as nitrates build-up in your tank .
25 Dr Hamish Inglis says : ‘ Once you have had a cold you build up immunity to that particular virus .
26 There are three polarisation states for deuterium nuclei , so only a third of the atoms in unpolarised deuterium will line up perpendicular to the magnetic fields .
27 A Protestant emphasis on improving the world , under the aegis of providence , could confer dignity on scientific activity that promised both glory to God and the relief of human suffering .
28 We swam out perpendicular to the two to three knot current , until we were in its heart .
29 Meanwhile , it squarely embodies an assumption that causal laws are correlations , thus ruling out reference to structures and structural forces to explain the correlations .
30 Focusing upon problem emotions means that the counsellor has to be able to pass back information to the counsellee .
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