Example sentences of "[noun] through to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Mr How had set up a property firm called Prosperpoint , and transfered cash from his clients investment funds through to a bank in the Isle of Man , then on to Switzerland , then back to Prosperpoint .
2 The proprietor thrust aside the plastic tassels that filled the doorway through to the back of the dry cleaner 's and dumped his shopping bag on the floor next to an ironing board .
3 It is , however , well worth seeking out an unpasteurised Camembert , handmade in Normandy and originally only available from the end of spring through to the autumn .
4 AUSTRALIAN aboriginals have been known to slit the penis through to the urethra so that it can be flattened out to resemble the forked penis of the kangaroo .
5 Opposite Marks and Spencers bazaar was an arcade providing a short cut through to The Market although it was always closed on Sundays , with locked gates at either end .
6 He began to sleep through the night , and became much less active — for the first time he could sit down and watch a television programme through to the end .
7 Finally , on the front panel , there 's the master volume knob and the controls for the onboard Alesis reverb/delay unit — a sixteen-notch rotary knob and a ‘ return ’ control for setting the required level of effect , from the tiniest hint of echo through to a nightmare in a bathtub .
8 Hydra sprawls from the boundary of Canis Minor through to the south of Corvus and Virgo .
9 He also proposed to remove Dover House and extend the park through to the river to the north of the offices .
10 He took the tin of sardines through to the lean-to , opened it and emptied the contents onto the cat 's dish .
11 Your Lordships therefore heard the case through to the end of the argument .
12 But he had to play his part through to the end .
13 In such conditions , a brown forest soil seems to have developed widely from late glacial times through to the Bronze Age .
14 The crypt that remains here is thought to be the best-preserved Romanesque crypt in Lombardy and contains remains from paleo-Christian times through to the Renaissance .
15 The Hijackers do n't know there 's a C.B. in the truck so I 've managed to feed the mike through to the back and I 'll keep sending as much information as I can .
16 Pain in the lower right chest through to the back ( like Mercurius ) worse ( < ) lying on the painful side , ( Opposite to Bryonia )
17 So we 've therefore put some proposals through to the Commission of European Communities , which eventually will go to the Council of Ministers to extend Jet 's experimental programme into the end of 1996 .
18 He took Sarah through to the parlour where the glow from a fire lent a more cheerful appearance to the book-lined retreat which had been exclusively his own since Adelaide 's death .
19 In these latter churches , the minister would conduct the main part of the communion service in the nave with the screens closed , and then take communicants through to the chancel to receive the eucharist , an arrangement that inevitably invested the sacrament with a sense of mystery .
20 While she was munching her way through her third chocolate bar , Henry took the chicken through to the scullery and carefully anointed its breast with the thallium .
21 .0 A SECOND successive goalless draw saw England through to the World Cup finals here yesterday , when Poland practically burned themselves out in an often scintillating hour and yet fanned an ember in the last minute when Ryszard Tarasiewicz 's shot struck Peter Shilton 's crossbar .
22 Sub-graphs that are disjoint to the main graph ( i.e. do not have a continuation through to the utterance final vertex ) are not included on the final edge count .
23 This acting can range from pairs of students re-enacting a dialogue through to a simulation involving the whole class .
24 Opening the security door , he led the boy through to an interview room .
25 The company ran its own miniature exchange with five or six operators , and one of these girls would put the subscriber through to the theatre , concert hall or church of his choice .
26 Each winter , from December through to the beginning of March , cruises are organised on the Exe for close views of waders and wildfowl .
27 But the Eddie did n't specify a date at all , beyond a vague ‘ waiting period ’ that extended from the beginning of December through to the end of February .
28 There is only one generation a year , flying from July through to the autumn .
29 I have never met anyone who heard that broadcast , but the Indian superintendent and I felt we had seen the job through to the end .
30 I gain a sense of achievement knowing I can see a job through to the end . ’
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