Example sentences of "[verb] [art] [noun sg] to " in BNC.
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1 | Could this different pathophysiological basis influence the response to oxygen ? |
2 | This will , in turn , influence the value to the customer and the price he will be willing to pay . |
3 | This will , in turn , influence the value to the customer and the price he will be willing to pay . |
4 | This , in turn , can be traced to ageist values within society generally , which permeate social and political thinking and thereby influence the extent to which older people as a group are viewed as less important , less in need , or just less interesting than other groups of people ( e.g. Hughes and Mtezuka , 1992 ) . |
5 | The path turned inland and met the road to Sandweg which cut through arable land , punctuated by low , brooding barns . |
6 | Ann whispered the question to Harry while the new arrival was being led upstairs by her cousins to see the house . |
7 | Hitler flags lined all roads , pictures of Hitler decorated all houses , and garlands draped the entrance to every village ; hope and loyalty were prevalent everywhere ! |
8 | Given the most rapid detection possible , the most effective means of transmitting the call to the fire services and their most prompt attendance , it is reasonable to suppose that in the absence of an effective automatic fire extinguishing system or even the benefit of a conventional one , that the fire will have reached a well advanced stage on their arrival . |
9 | Legal interest centres on a HIV-infected man charged on several counts for wilfully transmitting the virus to his sex partners . |
10 | His decision to sacrifice the newspaper to MacQuillan rather than sacrifice the estate to the newspaper had not met with universal approval , but he did not let that trouble him . |
11 | Mr Kinnock must stress the extent to which Labour has really changed . |
12 | Critics would stress the extent to which the children 's freedom to map out their lives for themselves , to make genuine preferences on the basis of a range of possibilities denied them , had been stifled . |
13 | She must have taken the letter straight to a photocopy shop after collecting it from the skip and then posted the copy to Zen before returning to the house , calculating that if the copy came to light each of the Milettis would equally be under suspicion . |
14 | In the case of the Society for Biophysical Medicine , agency staff conducted the transcribing task themselves , and posted the information to the research project . |
15 | PC Nigel fits the clamp to Bryan 's hired Astra . |
16 | However local and limited the awareness to which the words testify , I have identified a spontaneous reaction to which , since it is provisionally approved by ‘ Be aware ’ , it is rational to seek means as an end good in itself ; if you disagree , the burden of proof has shifted to you , to make me aware of something overlooked which will redirect my response . |
17 | We have limited the field to stored-program computers , and we further limit the field to general-purpose computers ; that is , to computers with an instruction set rich enough to perform a wide variety of tasks . |
18 | Helena Kennedy , a barrister , said the law should be changed in rape cases to compel the defence to ‘ reveal their hand ’ , in relation to any attack made on an alleged victim 's character . |
19 | Nizan 's ironic , chiding tone must ultimately be understood as a facet of a global strategy to compel the reader to greater self-awareness . |
20 | When confiding the news to Greeves , he said , ‘ My long night talk with Dyson and Tolkien had a good deal to do with it . ’ |
21 | The company , faced with a bad debt of £40,000 , took drastic action to accommodate the blow to cash flow . |
22 | The main consideration with envelopes is that they should be large enough and strong enough to accommodate the material to be contained within them . |
23 | However , believing that the reforms do not go far enough , and backed by the National Council for Civil Liberties ( Liberty ) and The Independent , he is still pursuing the campaign to the European courts . |
24 | You do n't reach Downing Street by pretending you 've travelled the road to Damascus when you have n't even left home . ’ |
25 | She added : You do n't reach Downing Street by pretending you 've travelled the road to Damascus when you have n't even left home . ’ |
26 | So impressive are these abstract figures that their creators have travelled the world to be part of what almost amounts to an International Circus of skilled performers , all by invitation and with expenses paid ! |
27 | So too have the damages awarded by US courts against manufacturers found to have polluted the environment to a degree that has recently been decreed unacceptable . |
28 | Bissett went on down the corridor and unlocked the door to his room . |
29 | The Asian security man unlocked the door to the documentary department office and loped off down the corridor with a distracted smile on his face . |
30 | When the switch is open the pins are held at +5V via R1 — allowing the SRAM to be removed , whereas when it is closed the pins are switched direct to ground — ( ) V ) switching the SRAM into circuit . |