Example sentences of "[verb] to [conj] [art] " in BNC.

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1 DRDA application programming interfaces are more complex to write to than the SQL Access Group interfaces , he says .
2 The priority numbering system will be strictly adhered to unless a specific request is made by the Project Director to the New OED Computer Group or his appointed deputy .
3 That the Agenda order is strictly adhered to unless a motion is made to alter the order .
4 When one adds to that the immense variation in the capacities and abilities of the old people concerned , the possibility of making valid generalisations seems remote .
5 When one adds to that the £40 million or so from the trust , my hon. Friends at least will recognise that the Government can lay claim to spending more money on sport than any party has done for many years .
6 I repeat that if one adds to that the £40 million from the foundation , the £20 million a year for football and the £1 million that I found for the champion coaching scheme , it is clear that our commitment to sport is greater than anyone 's .
7 What we are endeavouring to and the company has not as yet went out and dispersed of apprentices willy-nilly .
8 As indeed it has to if the action potential is to occur .
9 She has to if the money ai n't arrived .
10 Well he has to and the judge has
11 I could I know about there if I really want to but no way I could do it .
12 If airlines can fly wherever and whenever they want to after the EC 's liberalisation of aviation , experience will be similar to that of the United States , where empirical work suggests the market is ‘ imperfectly contestable ’ .
13 They choose to tax as much as they want to and they choose to spend as much as they want to and no one can tell them otherwise , there is no central control over that .
14 The limited availability of materials for building and the primitive methods of construction meant that the houses lasted only about a generation and were often rebuilt and frequently added to as the family increased .
15 The limited availability of materials for building and the primitive methods of construction meant that the houses lasted only about a generation and were often rebuilt and frequently added to as the family increased .
16 ‘ publication of information relating to and the form , preparation keeping and certification of accounts '
17 A pretty pass we 've come to if a man ca n't have a friend without being labelled queer . ’
18 I only look towards someone like Dylan because I see the things that have happened in his career and the conclusions he 's come to and the way he 's responded to outside forces , the audience , the press … and I recognize a similarity to how I feel in my career .
19 It has impressed but it has to have the right tools if it is going to provide the safety that councillor referred to and the saving of life which was referred to by councillor .
20 The choice usually ( but by no means always ) corresponds to whether the theorist concerned was a physiological psychologist , non-physiological psychologist or sociologist , respectively — which in turn tends to be associated with the causes being located in the biology , psyche or values of the individual .
21 Requests for extracts should therefore be addressed to unless the deed has been recorded only recently ( for both Sasine and Books of Council and Session registrations , within the last five months ) .
22 Rimsky-Korsakov added an orchestral figure representing flames for the immolation of the Old Believers , and brought back the Preobazhensky March ; Shostakovich added to that a reminiscence of the Dawn music opening the opera ; and Stravinsky used the intended tune plus two more , giving the ending a much more positive and balanced view of the Old Believers as not regressive and obscurantist but charged with dignity and Christian endurance .
23 I must get my other teeth attended to and the cream can deal with .
24 Support for the scanning hypothesis of lateral differences in tachistoscopic recognition came in the form of findings which showed the direction of visual field asymmetry to be related to whether the stimuli are symmetrically shaped ( Bryden , 1968 ) or are presented in normal or in mirror image orientation ( Harcum and Filion , 1963 ) .
25 A cinema organ is like a big jelly mould , illuminated from within , a most spectacular thing that changed colour according to whether a major key or a minor key was being played .
26 It is about morality , and morality can not be judged according to the quality of our intentions , or according to whether a practice is socially sanctioned .
27 So there is liable to be a very different result according to whether a recall test is carried out within 24 hours , or a week , or three months , of an ad appearing : and ‘ pre-tests ’ , based on showing an ad to consumers before it appears , and finding out what they remember of it within minutes , can be almost totally irrelevant — except as an indication of intelligibility .
28 There was some discussion as to hardship , but that could cut both ways according to whether a large or small part was surrendered , so that hardship was not a matter which could be taken into account .
29 In at least one area this varied according to whether a person was seen by elderly services or others , because staffing profiles were much more biased towards medical care for elderly people with mental illness , with the result that other professions , such as social work , occupational therapy , and community psychiatric nursing , were less frequently called upon .
30 Calls a function testbit written in assembly-language and delivering TRUE or FALSE according to whether a bit is set or not .
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