Example sentences of "[to-vb] [prep] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 BARNSLEY trainer Steve Norton ca n't wait to go off talent-hunting to America again in a fortnight 's time .
2 I was talking to this other lad across the road — we were due to go off duty at two and we were just hanging about before making our way down to the station — there was no relief for us on that shift .
3 " Always glad to see you , of course , though I must say that I 'd hoped to go off duty without any more trouble .
4 Now , having checked out the way EUROAIM functions , we may decide to go as part of their umbrella .
5 For we understand that Dexter — the man who sacked David Gower — is set to go as chairman of selectors .
6 Richard took hostages from them and then sent them and other members of their league to England to sue for mercy at his father 's feet .
7 It is quite anomalous therefore that SI 1991 489 regulation 3(c) makes specific provision for any person to sue for breach of Core Rule 28 ( or a comparable SRO insider dealing rule ) .
8 It follows therefore , that a fireman fighting a fire at a factory which is not his place of employment , will not be able to sue for breach of such a statutory duty ( Hartley v Mayoh & Co [ 1954 ] 1 QB 383 ) .
9 If the promise was not met , could the employee use the mail message as s/he would a postal mail letter to sue for breach of contract or to support other legal action ?
10 His remedy was to sue for breach of contract .
11 A Kenyan chartered accountant threatened to sue for loss of business .
12 Pollock C.B. regarded the power to sue for defamation with reference to certain imputations of criminal conduct to be excluded because of the inability of a corporation to commit crimes such as murder , or incest , or adultery , or corruption .
13 I accept that the law has from the first appearance of corporations , in the absence of any relevant statutory direction , considered the question of a corporation 's right to sue for defamation by reference to the nature of the corporation itself and the need for the corporation to protect its lawful activities and property .
14 He reserved his deadliness for dealing with opponents in his own party , and had little to spare for use against the MacDonald governments .
15 Well a very close fought encounter at the stadium ; we had to wait for quarter of an hour for the first actual goal chance when Dave Bristow hit the ball from twenty five yards , which just cleared the bar .
16 We 'll have to wait for permission from the expatriate lady in Sweden . ’
17 If you can be as … affected as you seem to have been by answering journalists ' questions , perhaps I 'd be wiser to wait for publication of results , like everyone else .
18 The winches could then be run instantly without having to wait for steam to be available .
19 Members of the local black community were enraged by reports that the driver of the vehicle , Yoseph Lisef , 22 , who had sustained only minor injuries , was quickly taken away from the scene of the accident by a private Jewish ambulance service , whilst the more seriously injured children were left to wait for attention from a city ambulance crew .
20 Banks and bondholders are being asked to wait for repayment of nearly £1 billion of its £1.2 billion debt .
21 We parted company , he to wait for light on Bowfell , which did not look likely , while I headed down The Band for Hodge Close and an impatient climbing partner .
22 Certainly he was not waiting to see Artai — the Khan of the Merkuts was so powerful that he did not have to wait for audience like other men .
23 We should discuss timing the leaflet : on the one hand , it would be good to wait for consultation on course content , but there is also some urgency .
24 Has to wait for food to be cooked and prepare to wait for it .
25 Since job D has to wait for completion of B , and only B , before it can start , the early start for D is 7 .
26 Since job D has to wait for completion of B , and only B , before it can start , the early start for D is 7 .
27 Daalny had acted , after all ; she must have taken the second key during Vespers , from the nail where at noon she had watched the porter hang the first one , but she had had to wait for near-darkness before using it .
28 Entrusting the decision in unfair dismissal cases to tribunals was a conscious decision designed to include as part of the decision-making process the industrial experience of employers and employees .
29 We also need to understand any terms and conditions you wish to include as part of the deal structure .
30 He was aware of how professional he must appear to her in his preparations for what she saw as killing and which he had been trained to see as protection of the innocent .
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