Example sentences of "[verb] through to the [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 TWO student chefs from Darlington College have won through to the finals of a national catering competition .
2 With partner Jill Clark , she 's won through to the quarter-finals of the Japanese Open after beating the world 's number two pair from Indonesia .
3 The red theme has been carried through to the goblets that the family use every Christmas , the napkins and the candlesticks .
4 Part of the wall , as you can see , is to be knocked down to allow the drive to pass through to the garages .
5 There are also early signs that the increased cost of imports resulting from the devaluation of sterling last September is beginning to work through to the shops .
6 In fact , if I had n't rung through to the police station we 'd have had a squad car on our doorstep by now . ’
7 There are many difficulties in getting supplies through to the zones and priority is given to medicines , not to contraceptives , Campesina combatants are generally opposed to using contraceptives for religious reasons and while women from urban areas may wish to adopt some form of birth control , it is not always available :
8 Meanwhile , Noel Weir of Rathfriland got through to the singles final with a 21-7 victory over an out-of-touch Noel O'Hara from Herbert Park .
9 Captain Budd got through to the police station by telephone , only to be told that the constabulary had the situation well in hand .
10 Well we 've talked football , we 've talked speedway , we 're now going to talk rugby , because if you 've been following the exploits of the Bicester Rugby Club , you 'll know they got through to the semi-finals of a big national competition , and they play that semi-final this coming Saturday .
11 Anyway , I got through to the finals , that was really nerve-racking , and my mum and my boyfriend came along to see me in it .
12 In short the movies had broken through to the masses and had the power to pull in almost anybody and everybody who helped constitute the masses .
13 The problem has been compounded by the hot summers of 1989-90 which increased the rate of soil evaporation , thereby further reducing the amount of water which penetrated through to the aquifers .
14 Lightly comb through to the ends .
15 In large-scale national surveys , as carried out regularly by market research firms and government agencies , interviews may be carried out over the whole country and the people who have the task of making the analysis of several hundred or thousand schedules can not possibly be for ever phoning through to the interviewers to ask what some cryptic little scribble opposite question number 15 is supposed to mean .
16 WC apps : 8 Runners-up : 1958 After flirting with failure , the Swedes came through to the finals with a point to spare after a 2-0 victory in Poland in their last qualifying game .
17 Standing in the Townley Room and looking through to the sculptures displayed next door ( Room 83 ) , most of which were intended for public display , one is well aware of the reduced scale and decorative qualities sought by the private collector who wined and dined amidst his collection .
18 In the closing stages of the tournament I felt that the message had got through to the players about staying on their feet , and there were less penalties given for this offence than in the pool games .
19 For over two days no food or supplies could be got through to the defenders , nor any wounded evacuated .
20 Sunday morning say the start of the ladies ' competition with St Albans A and Mutineers going through to the semis to play St Albans B and Woodmill respectively , the latter two having been given byes to this stage .
21 Sponsored by Bass , the tournament attracted a good entry of 18 pairs , with the winners and runners-up of each group going through to the semi-finals .
22 It was decided that before the last section of the barrier was breached , a test hole would be bored and if the gases flowed through to the men , the hole would be sealed and some other means of rescue sought .
23 A ballot among 200 controllers at Waterloo resulted in a decision not to pass 999 calls through to the police or the military .
24 The CAP still takes up two thirds of the EC budget , but only £1 in every £3 gets through to the farmers .
25 The Victorian stoneware ‘ suite ’ from Mr Twyford 's manufactory was decorated with flowers in willow-pattern blue but paint flaked off the walls and the linoleum had worn through to the floorboards .
26 The man who spotted it says it 's inaccessible without proper equipment so Mr Scales is getting through to the coastguards , sir . ’
27 The most common difficulty found with hardware was that of coping with noisy lines and of getting through to the services .
28 The sounds of what was going on in the box were being relayed out into the laboratory where Gedanken was , but nothing happening in the laboratory was getting through to the beetles in the box .
29 Police need to break the cycle of crime by getting through to the juveniles .
30 It was getting through to the readers on a human level that counted .
  Next page