Example sentences of "[be] take to [art] " in BNC.

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1 Today we 're taking to the road with the stars .
2 ‘ I 've just been asked to take over a leading role in a production that 's been playing in Stratford which they 're taking to the Barbican .
3 You can ask for the visits to be extended , but before you get that you 're taken to the governor and asked why you want it longer and who is coming to visit you .
4 Now this weekend , three firemen from Didcot will be taking to a bicycle to cycle the length of the Ridgeway .
5 ‘ Well , ’ they continue , ‘ we 've been reading your columns and we 're just a little bit worried that you might mean it when you say that the European Community is a fraudulent delusion ; the German economy is kaput ; the French are morally bankrupt ; racism is becoming endemic ; America 's had it ; Britain 's in for five years of total chaos and the middle-classes will soon be taking to the streets .
6 On Saturday , the environmental campaigners will be taking to the streets of Colchester to urge furniture buyers to boycott stores which stock products made of mahogany .
7 Eight hundred competitors will be taking to the water this weekend for the annual River Wye raft race .
8 Some of the world 's finest vintage aircraft will be taking to the skies at a display this weekend .
9 This weekend , top harmonica player Brendan Power and guitarist Frank Kilkelly will be taking to the stage , at around 8pm .
10 The rigours of testing do not end next week as eight people , chosen by the Soviets and the British , will be taken to a Soviet hospital for further tests , the nature of which is as yet unclear .
11 He said that Stompie must be taken to a hospital if his life was to be saved .
12 When you have shown your disguised appreciation of the country 's monuments to the 1921 revolution and to the Great Patriotic War against Fascism and seen the palace where the last king lived , you will be taken to a Buddhist lamasery .
13 In many parts of the Kandyan Kingdom both civil and criminal disputes could be taken to a gamsabhava , or village council which attempted to bring about an amicable settlement .
14 If I did take the twins away all summer then Masquerade would be taken to a boatyard in Florida , so I now signed the necessary customs forms and the insurance waiver and the dozen other pieces of paper that would be needed to keep the United States government and the delivery company happy .
15 If her answers were unsatisfactory , their report would be taken to a magistrates ' court the next morning and a petition for her " reception order " drawn up and signed by two people — preferably near relatives or representatives of the family .
16 When a person is arrested away from a police station , section 30 says that he should be taken to a police station as soon as practicable unless the investigation requires his presence elsewhere .
17 He need not be taken to a designated police station if it is not anticipated he will be detained for more than six hours or where the arresting officer is without help .
18 There is no limit to the number of different problems which can be taken to a solicitor under the scheme .
19 The woman would then be taken to a certified hospital for medical examination , where she could be detained for up to three months .
20 The meeting resolved on the proposition of , seconded by that the chain should be taken to a jeweller to obtain design patterns with prices and format .
21 The problem which is outlined in the officer 's report on people wasting petrol to take small amounts of material to recycling banks would not apply to building materials , as the quantities in question would be lorry loads which would otherwise be taken to a landful site or fly tip .
22 But if it 's a more serious fault the machine will be taken to a workshop .
23 The doctor 's certificate must be taken to the Registrar of Births and Deaths in the registration sub-district where the death occurred , normally within five days .
24 If someone dies in hospital , they may rest in the hospital mortuary , or the funeral director will arrange for the body to be taken to the chapel of rest .
25 Everyone has the right to a church funeral , and for the body to be taken to the church , but it is not necessary to have a service at a funeral whether it is a burial or a cremation .
26 We moved from the orchard taking the prisoners with us and leaving the wounded to be taken to the rear .
27 On the other hand agricultural land is fixed so that beasts and tools have to be taken to the fields and then off them .
28 The machine could either stand on the threshing floor of an orthodox flail-threshing barn , which provided shelter from the weather , or it could be taken to the ricks in the fields .
29 ASOFTLY-SOFTLY approach is to be taken to the owners of one of Britain 's strangest threatened landscapes , the Clint-and-Gryke limestone pavements of the Yorkshire Dales .
30 The shop stewards also decided that all accident and emergency cases would be taken to the nearest accident and emergency department .
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