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

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1 They aimed to pass over to the other side of the stockade through the gap between one section and the other , where the bridge spanned the stream .
2 First , because I have to slip over to the pub without her .
3 No I nip over to the shop and get it from near .
4 Or you could live there , rig up your personal computer and play the Stock Exchange and the Bourse at the same time and then nip over to the West End for a show . ’
5 This division of the sky was eventually carried over to the division of the circle and so led to our present habit of dividing the complete ( two-dimensional ) angle around a point into 360 degrees .
6 a widow is the first line of a paragraph left alone at the foot of a page and an orphan is the last line of a paragraph carried over to the top of a new page .
7 an over-ambitious agenda which takes too long to complete or has to be carried over to the next meeting .
8 It 's a pity this finish quality is n't carried over to the fingerboard , an area of a budget guitar which often lets it down .
9 The Government confirmed that the Bill would not proceed — it fell with the dissolution of Parliament on 16 March ( unfinished legislation can not be carried over to the new parliament ) .
10 So too his message of the coming kingdom can not be lifted out and carried over to the present : that message was refuted when Jesus himself attempted to provoke the intervention of God and bring about the end of history by challenging the powers and authorities of his own day .
11 Bell had done original design work on a defunct prop-powered XP–59 and that designation was carried over to the new effort in an attempt to mask the true nature of the project .
12 When night fell we were appalled to find that the same principle had been carried over to the highway .
13 Any tasks not completed by the due date on the ‘ to do list ’ can be automatically carried over to the reminders list , a facility I found to be very useful .
14 Any tasks not completed by the due date on the ‘ to do list ’ can be automatically carried over to the reminders list , a facility I found to be very useful .
15 The battle for political supremacy was thus carried over to the Congress itself .
16 He was suspended for five matches by UEFA after his verbal attack on Swedish referee Rune Larrson during the European Cup-Winners ' Cup game against Spartak Moscow last October — four games of which will be carried over to the next Liverpool campaign in Europe following their elimination last October by Spartak Moscow .
17 He bounded over to the chest containing the strange white powder .
18 I headed over to the Kylie to collect Peter , so as to have an additional adult on board , and finally back to Nada to pick up Terrie and the children .
19 Storming over to the table , she snatched up her briefcase and flicked it open .
20 Later , when they realised Japan 's true intentions , Aung San and the small Burmese army , backed by an underground movement , decided to come over to the British , a very courageous step when you realise their numbers , and their limited arms .
21 Before the Collector continued about his business , Dr McNab asked him to come over to the window for a moment .
22 Aung San got through a message that he was ready to come over to the Allies while the Japanese understood that he would be fighting for them .
23 ’ ‘ It 's funny to think that just this afternoon I had the idea of getting poor old Eddy to come over to the Gates and tell me something about himself …
24 To her surprise he offered to come over to the office .
25 So , the only reason for her writing was to say that if he ever did get the chance to come over to the UK again , well , she 'd like — well , it would be nice …
26 Do you want to come over to the bungalow and sort this bedroom out or
27 Fly over to the Continent by KLM
28 He knew from past experience that she was capable of leaping over to the terrace .
29 Five or six young boys had come over to the fire with some scraps of meat and sections of cleaned intestine that they skewered with s ticks and laid on the embers to roast .
30 He had arrived at the Laboratory over an hour late , at ten o'clock , looking terribly tired because he had been up that night at the scene of crime , and had come over to the reception desk to collect his personal post .
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