Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [pron] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 The fingers were long , unnaturally thin , the skin on them so clear it seemed he could see right through them to the bone itself .
2 Similarly , all the forms of human culture — art , law , religion and so on-are objectifications of the human spirit by which it projects itself externally in order then to move on through them to a higher self-realisation .
3 I took in with me to the hospital some homoeopathic remedies which are specifics in cases of croup , namely aconite , spongia and Hepar sulphuris .
4 Undaunted , the young Scot chased after the opposition in one shoe and came in with them to the final take-over .
5 And er nearly every boy used to take a handkerchief along with him to the , that was to the Christmas party because that was the only party you had a meal at school .
6 On Saturdays as a special treat Granpa would allow me to go along with him to the early morning market in Covent Garden , where he would select the fruit and vegetables that we would later sell from his pitch , just opposite Mr Salmon 's and Dunkley 's , the fish and chippy that stood next to the baker 's .
7 A neighbour suggested I go along with her to the local WI and , despite my reservations , I had a wonderful time .
8 Then complete the inspection voucher and bring this along with you to the Safety Centre .
9 He looked thoughtfully from her to the dresser .
10 It was decided that a chain of rescue men would pass the trapped miners along from one to the other through Bank Mine .
11 The critical point is that the four stages are progressive : educators move along from one to the other .
12 I think of another man , to whom I had said something about Jesus Christ while marching down alongside him to an army parade !
13 In London he sat beside Johnson in their various venues ; now he rode beside him in the post-chaise taking them up through eastern Scotland ; next he would canter along beside him to the Western Isles .
14 Isabel 's gaze skittered nervously past them to the two men-at-arms , now held at the end of a very businesslike sword attached to the hand of the young man she had seen with Guy at the church .
15 This can now be seen at Scotland 's only Thai restaurant , Buntom 's in Nelson Street , the proprietors having given most generously for it to the cause .
16 And he picked up Gabriel with just one arm round his hips , and stumped stolidly away with him to the privacy of the inn .
17 I compared myself to a dog who has got hold of a large piece of meat , and runs away with it to a corner , where he may devour it in peace , without any fear of others taking it from him . ’
18 If you are n't as good as if you were in church , the train wo n't come , and we sha n't go away in it to the ends of the earth .
19 He stalked away from her to a cherrywood desk in the far corner .
20 At first this was hard to prove , since local authorities were now given many new relief duties : at the same time a number of extensive taxation rights were transferred away from them to the Centre .
21 Moving away from him to a place further along the deck , she grimaced at her own rudeness .
22 The summons of Winchelsey to Rome only served to redirect baronial irritation away from him to the pope .
23 He examined the long split-level room stretching away from him to the tall windows at the far end .
24 The ravine widened and opened upon the sly , the curtain-wall with its vast bulk of darkness curved away from him to the right , and left him .
25 I measure sixty paces along the wall and then walk away from it to the nearest tree .
26 The dividing line between border and pathway melts as plants spill over from one to the other .
27 Jane Postlethwaite looked uncertainly from one to the other .
28 Remember what I did there I got three themes and for each one I got three subthemes so that what you put over to them to the audience are those three themes .
29 Before Rachel could reply , Ace walked quickly past them to the communications terminal .
30 Now they have developed , with the help of Professor Van Aken of Utrecht University , a simple method of Roentgen photography , whereby a low-powered X-ray ( 220 volts exactly , which are converted to 5000 volts ) passes through the paper and exposes the negative directly behind it to the exact amount of radiation needed to show up the detailed structure of the impression left by the mould and the watermark .
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