Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] to [art] " in BNC.
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1 | While subjects were actually driving around they were required to give risk ratings , this may have caused them to concentrate unusually on the risky situations and think about them to a much greater degree than they would have normally . |
2 | But a neighbour wrote an anonymous letter about them to the DHSS and before long an official was knocking at their door . |
3 | But it was as nothing to the humiliation which the unions would pour on his government in the last two years of its term . |
4 | Incest and necrophilia were as nothing to the amorous Egyptian gods . |
5 | We are interested and associated but not absorbed and should European statesmen address us in the words which were used of old — Shall we speak for thee to the king or captain of the host ? ' — we should reply , Nay sir , for we dwell among our own people' ’ . |
6 | ‘ Since this campaign began , not a day has passed without them trying to spin some story or other about me to the local paper . |
7 | Similarly , all the forms of human culture — art , law , religion and so on-are objectifications of the human spirit by which it projects itself externally in order then to move on through them to a higher self-realisation . |
8 | After his initial gaffe that McQueen should own books , Johnson opened out to a man of culture , a man who understood his own problems and who had thought a way through them to a solution , however sad emigration might prove . |
9 | DeVore met those eyes and saw through them to the emptiness beyond . |
10 | The fingers were long , unnaturally thin , the skin on them so clear it seemed he could see right through them to the bone itself . |
11 | Then he took the wallet of photographs from his pocket and leafed through them to the ninth picture in Heather 's collection . |
12 | I feel their flames go through me to the tower . |
13 | What , after all , is the difference between a priest acting in the highest sense of his vocation , or a prophet compelled into declamation , or such a saint ( even unknowing ) , opening himself up to the mercies of God , becoming a channel for them to the world ? |
14 | In 1790 a great meeting of tanners held in London elected him to speak for them to the prime minister , William Pitt , concerning the distressed state of the tanning trade ; and in 1793 he wrote to parliament on behalf of Bristol tanners to suggest remedies for the scarcity of the oak bark used in tanning . |
15 | Our motoring culture has a price all too evident to the police investigating car crime , to the victims of road accidents , and the nurses caring for them to the one in seven children suffering from asthma and the environment , as more and more areas of the countryside are carved up to make way for roads . |
16 | Once you 've paid your $399 , you are a ‘ non-revenue passenger ’ , worth nothing to the airline . |
17 | And Marcus came to be walking between them to a partitioned corner of the changing room . |
18 | And , by the Married Women 's Property Act 1964 , any money derived by a wife from an allowance made by her husband for housekeeping purposes , or any property acquired out of it , is deemed , in the absence of any agreement between them to the contrary , to belong in equal shares to the husband and wife . |
19 | The need for an ‘ official name ’ for indexes and dictionaries contrasts with the desire of others for a set of rules for different names leaving the choice between them to the user . |
20 | In this extension , the waves cross , mutually focus each other , re-expand and then separate leaving Minkowski space between them to the future . |
21 | Their running was impeded by the mass of men coming out of the main doors and scattering in all directions , and heads down , they made their way between them to the back of the Naafi and into the rest room , which was empty ; and they were just in the process of taking off their wet top coats when the supervisor came in , saying , ‘ Oh , I 'm in luck ; I was about to send to the hut for help . |
22 | Isambard made a motion of his hand to the men who held the boy pinned by the arms , and he was half-dragged , half-carried between them to the rack . |
23 | We were further delayed getting back on station by a detour for me to the south end of Duke Street . |
24 | She called after them to no purpose . |
25 | Harold acceded at once and I trotted dutifully after him to a small anteroom adjoining the Cabinet room . |
26 | Berthe Weill shrugged and crossed the street after him to the catcalls of the crowd . |
27 | In another 10 or 12 years , history will show that it is more likely that nation states will look after themselves to a greater extent than hitherto . |
28 | Quiet , never shouting about himself to the world . |
29 | Their private parts were firmly jammed in the wringer and all it needed was for somebody to the rescue . |
30 | The path took me under trees in full leaf and out across open fields where below me to the left the river Bain , the shortest river in England , flowed on its two-and-a-half-mile journey from Semer Water to the river Ure . |