Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] to [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | I think the er the Home Secretary will be becoming increasingly concerned er if there is n't a a conclusion by mid April but I think maybe er honourable friends on both sides of the house may want to onto when the last date should be . |
2 | Ecgberht also minted his own coins and was doing so by the early 770s at the latest if one of them , as has been suggested , served as a prototype for one of Charlemagne 's which must date to before c . |
3 | Nevertheless it is pernicious because it trades on the pernicious habit of labelling things or qualities ( hard/soft , consonant/vowel ) masculine or feminine ( a habit we must return to in Chapter 5 ) . |
4 | Similarly , he saw that Bastin should move to outside-from inside-left because there was less danger that the youngster would be knocked about on the wing . |
5 | The to infinitive is called for with such verbs , so it is not surprising that perceptual verbs should take to before the infinitive when used in the more conceptual inferential sense . |
6 | It is important to remember just how similar the physical features are that one must respond to in facial speech and facial expression judgements . |
7 | You could I I er it seems to me that body that you should go to with this is the joint sub . |
8 | The third cycle , of in-service training , should amount to at least a term 's worth every seven years for all teachers in post . |
9 | The person you should talk to about this is your tutor at college and to a counsellor . |
10 | A list of written works which have been consulted and which the reader may refer to for more information . |
11 | Wilkie said it was Alexander she ought to talk to about Van Gogh and Hodgkiss said Alexander was an excellent example of what he was talking about , the effect of this light , the difficulty of fixing colours . |
12 | He had drawn up a long list of people she ought to talk to during the day : fashion houses , designers , a couple of artists ' studios , a gallery specializing in contemporary prints . |
13 | Yeah well I 'll speak to about it by all means but I 'm not quite sure how the hell she 's gon na be able to do it . |
14 | Yeah well I 'll speak to about it by all means but I 'm not quite sure how the hell she 's gon na be able to do it . |
15 | she does n't spell her name like that and I 'll speak to within the next couple of working days |
16 | The oldest book source that Highlanders might refer to for plant lore is probably the Bible . |
17 | Many of the legal ‘ rights ’ or ‘ incidents ’ of what political scientists or philosophers might refer to as citizenship are enjoyed regardless of whether the individual in question is a British citizen . |
18 | The first of these we might refer to as appraisal . |
19 | The recruitment of migrant labour has also had what one might refer to as a series of indirect benefits , especially in the earlier phase of immigration , because Britain and the other importing countries were able to avoid the costs involved in actually producing the immigrant labour power , from the birth to the maturation of the workers concerned , and because of the lower demands on the welfare state of economically active , healthy , single , young men and women who nevertheless paid the same rate of taxation as other workers ( Gorz , 1970 ) . |
20 | What a doctor might refer to as ‘ rubella ’ will probably be called ‘ German measles ’ by the mother of the child with the complaint . |
21 | Yes I know you 'll have to with me . |
22 | I 'll have to in the Argos place . |
23 | But you 'll have to before a day . |
24 | Durkheim and Weber , two immensely influential figures , spent a great deal of time not merely defining sociology 's subject matter , but arguing for and demonstrating what the consequences of each of their different conceptions might amount to as a disciplined inquiry . |
25 | So you look at that and you say okay differentiate it once to get the V differentiate it again to get acceleration and it 'll come to minus K X. |
26 | This is the basis of English rib and Fisherman 's rib , which we 'll come to in a later article . |
27 | and it 's called mediant because it lies exactly half way between the first note and the fifth note which is also a very important note in the scale , which we 'll come to in a minute . |
28 | I would endorse what Ken has said , I certainly am of the view there are overriding reasons which I 'll come to in a moment for putting forward a general location , I had seen that as a central location which may or may not span more than one district . |
29 | The difficulty we have with both this scheme and the others that er you 'll come to in a moment is that there are always people who want you to go that bit further . |
30 | First of all she 'll start to for things behind the dad 's back . |