Example sentences of "[pron] 's [noun sg] to " in BNC.

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1 The main survey showed that women were anyway much more likely than men to say they would prefer weekly payments to monthly — a factor which , as we have seen , tends to narrow someone 's choice to the exclusion of some relatively low-cost types of credit .
2 We can see similar ‘ invitations to continue ’ in someone 's response to a series of instructions or directions .
3 We describe pitch in terms of high and low , and some people find it difficult to relate what they hear in someone 's voice to a scale ranging from low to high .
4 Possibly he might be angry or resentful about someone 's attitude to him .
5 ‘ But alcohol dilutes someone 's judgment to the point where they 're physically dangerous , ’ says Luke who ironically plays recovering alcoholic Dylan McKay in the teen series .
6 Clearly , not everyone 's reaction to the situation was the same .
7 If claims do arise , it is in everyone 's interest to be able to identify easily all the matters that were disclosed .
8 Today the Law Society — though known first and foremost as the body which governs solicitors — is also actively involved in law reform and improving everyone 's access to justice .
9 Today the Law Society — though known first and foremost as the body which governs solicitors — is also actively involved in law reform and improving everyone 's access to justice .
10 Today the Law Society — though known first and foremost as the body which governs solicitors — is also actively involved in law reform and improving everyone 's access to justice .
11 Today the Law Society — though known first and foremost as the body which governs solicitors — is also actively involved in law reform and improving everyone 's access to justice .
12 May be , but it is also surely the duty of someone like Mr Chatrier , as a leading official of an organisation responsible for the continuing prosperity of tennis worldwide and at all levels , to draw everyone 's attention to such dangers .
13 He was still trying to find them among the milling blackened faces , when a sudden shout drew everyone 's attention to a flicker of torch light weaving through the trees towards the highway .
14 One that indicates stop at once ( something 's going very wrong and you need to draw everyone 's attention to it ) .
15 Greenpeace 's international HQ produces an amazing amount of campaign literature : sea turtle fact sheets , Everyone 's Guide to Toxics in the Home , five major arguments against kangaroo farming , ocean incineration of toxic waste , driftnets , the destruction of red coral , campaign to end nuclear weapon testing , save Antarctica , let's save the Mediterranean , and a great deal more .
16 Everyone 's guide to tulips , daffodils and lilies ; August 1 Focusing on the splendour of camellias , rhododendrons and magnolias ;
17 We 'll have a lot of fun , now that everything 's back to normal .
18 That one should live to the utmost of one 's ability to be big — to be noble , and true and honourable and beautiful .
19 One might expect one 's money to be used to buy holidays or be handed to charity , but that is not what happens .
20 In traditional society this would not be regarded as sponging or parasitism , for it was felt that one 's relationship to one 's own son was no closer than that to the sons of siblings , and most people had more nephews than sons .
21 An individual 's allegiance could be shaped by questions of party principle and party loyalty , but it could also be shaped by one 's relationship to the central government , or Court , and one 's attitude towards the power of the executive .
22 Such awareness becomes important in helping clarify one 's place in society and , thus , one 's relationship to others in that society .
23 The interest of subjecting one 's society and one 's life to such principles of justice is assumed to be everyone 's highest interest .
24 It is not therefore always appropriate to allow one 's life to be dictated by the differing fiscal policies in force around the world .
25 The life of science involves dedicating one 's life to the discovery of the nature of reality .
26 The strength of subsequent recovery will depend largely upon the willingness truly to hand over one 's will and the outcome of one 's life to a non-individual-human God .
27 Young workers needed to develop the ‘ ability to grapple with unfamiliar conditions , and the habit of applying one 's mind and one 's knowledge to what one has to do ’ .
28 It can find expression in one 's attitude to voluntary organizations , to the culture and traditions of the community , and in behaviour to its members when met in anonymous situations .
29 Inasmuch as they are motivated by one 's consent they become , in a small undramatic way , an expression of one 's attitude to one 's society .
30 Nor is the allocation of rewards in contemporary Britain commensurate with skill , hard work and the importance of one 's contribution to society , in the way that functionalist analyses of stratification would suggest .
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