Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] [verb] to [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | At the back , the defence went to work and Paul Reece performed his tricks again to keep Oxford in command . |
2 | From the outset there was a fear that the defence intended to home in on Mr Bush 's relationship with Noriega , both as CIA director and Vice-President . |
3 | Students who achieve an acceptable standard may have the opportunity to progress to degree studies . |
4 | Students who achieve an acceptable standard may have the opportunity to progress to degree studies . |
5 | A short order may be made , for example , to give a parent the opportunity to return to court with legal representation . |
6 | In this respect it seems unlikely that successive governments were given the opportunity to return to normalcy in the manner which they wished . |
7 | On our Boeing 757 charter flights to Mombasa you have the opportunity to upgrade to Sovereign 's Silver or Gold Service , seating for which is in the front section of the aircraft . |
8 | For those with slightly less energy , the evening consisted of a barn dance and disco , and every one had the opportunity to listen to Consultancy Services ' David Webber and his string quartet . |
9 | When the opportunity arises to appointment a new member of staff a considerable amount of attention needs to be given to attract the right person . |
10 | The lottery is expected to raise around £1 billion per year , about half of which will be used to support the arts ( in particular the national heritage ) , with the remainder allocated to protection of the environment , sports and charities . |
11 | The House of Lords Select Committee understood the provision to relate to development plans but if it is implemented in the UK ( and this depends somewhat on MAFF taking an unusually enlightened view ) it could pave the way for farm development plans incorporating conservation and agricultural measures . |
12 | These can include advisory services for businesses — support for local enterprise centres , such as the support given to Work West for its business information service based at the workshop on the Glen Road — enterprise awareness training and exhibitions and support for courses , such as the Women and Enterprise programme run by Work West . |
13 | The Library could budget for phased installation of entry level systems within the next three years by spending a proportion of its budget in each of these years , and working on these systems would give us the expertise to proceed to development phase . |
14 | Someone was shaking him by the shoulder as the band played ‘ God Save the King ’ and everyone else in the cinema stood to attention . |
15 | The sentence belongs to writing , forming there the basic unit of textual structures . |
16 | He introduced a sense of subtlety and freedom into her drawings where previously she had only mimicked the technique applied to etching or engraving . |
17 | As the afternoon turned to dusk , we found the perfect campsite , some flat grassland sheltered by a belt of fir trees , with a river nearby . |
18 | Alison says the National Health Service is woefully underfunded and thinks many people would be prepared to pay extra income tax if the money went to health care . |
19 | We will phase out the Assisted Places Scheme without affecting those already in it , and restore the money saved to state schools . |
20 | Should n't we give some of the money raised to Farm Aid ? |
21 | The most important provision in this manual is that the system of cash accounting , rather than accruals accounting , is used in accounting for the money voted to government departments by Parliament . |
22 | Well if the Conservatives got in would you cut back the money allocated to recreation and would you cut back on the recreation services ? |
23 | After about thirty years with a genuine French landlord who only sold beer in half-pints , among his other idiosyncrasies , the brewery bowed to public opinion and renamed the place the French Pub . |
24 | The Gascons demanded that such issues , which gravely threatened the liberty and hereditary rights of both Edward I and themselves , be settled by those they called ‘ common judges ’ or wardens ( esgardiatores ) who should judge the case according to marcher law . |
25 | One civil servant , at least , managed to escape the net when Clive Ponting , a Ministry of Defence official who had leaked documents about apparent ministerial lies on the sinking of the Belgrano during the Falklands War , was acquitted by a jury when the case came to court . |
26 | As a consequence the PFA continued to support George Eastham 's legal battle and it was not until 1964 that the case came to court and Sir Justice Wilberforce established the players ' legal right to the second freedom that had already been negotiated in 1961 . |
27 | The mesne process allowed a creditor to have his debtor arrested and detained before the case came to court and judgement was made on it . |
28 | When the case came to court , he did n't attend , leaving his lawyers to make a dramatic plea to the jury . |
29 | The case came to court 21 months later . |
30 | When the case came to court , the magistrate evidently decided that it was impossible to say which party was to blame in a scuffle of this sort . |