Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] [art] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 So what has to happen , ideally , is that your detective must learn piece by piece things which will eventually make the answer to the fundamental puzzle clear .
2 An ‘ ideator ’ is a prolific idea generator who , by definition , does not like to ‘ reduce ideas to practice ’ ( i.e. make a prototype ) , but would rather restrict the ideas to the realm of mental gymnastics .
3 The head of an agency can not typically ensure that his subordinates behave in a way that is exactly specified ; he can only design a policy to which they respond , and his perception of their response shapes the design .
4 It will long remain a problem to the average person that these sheds had such wide popularity and that so little use was made of the cheaper , cleaner , or , in fact , better umbrella sheds .
5 Critics of the plan , including World Wide Fund for Nature experts , argue that such a move would only expose the rhinos to greater danger .
6 We will only know the answer to this and many other questions when televising has continued for a much longer time .
7 Of course , studies of police attitudes or talk however racist , do not necessarily show the police to be discriminatory in practice .
8 Do not necessarily give the job to the most highly qualified candidate .
9 The Keeper of the Temple will only give the Key to those who have proved themselves worthy .
10 Smith somehow got back to clear Stuart Rimmer 's shot off the line after the Quakers ' new style offside trap was sprung by Paul Comstive , and Mark Prudhoe could only head the ball to the forward 's feet .
11 Although there was no clear distinction between philosophy and the particular sciences , the subordination of metaphysics to theology did not necessarily entail an obstruction to the study of nature .
12 To the credit of both Hortense and Le Bas , it was agreed that Louis-Napoleon should be enrolled in the High School at Augsburg , a move which it was hoped would not only remove a tendency to idleness and day-dreaming but would also give him a chance to make friends with other boys of his own age .
13 Furthermore one can perhaps see the solution to which Tolkien , in his philological way , was drawn , namely to present the First Age as ‘ a complex of divergent texts interlinked by commentary ’ ( UT , p. 1 ) , the texts themselves being supposedly written by Men , of different periods , looking back across the ages to vast rumours of whose truth they knew only part .
14 While the firm would not be compelled to disclose or utilise the information about B when advising A , the fact that it owes a duty of confidentiality to B will not necessarily constitute a defence to a breach of its duty of disclosure to A. If the firm is to be fully protected it must obtain A2 's consent to its acting in the conflict situation after informing him of its conflicting duties and the fact that it can not perform its full duties of disclosure .
15 Although many patients in this group had abnormal results , both fast and slow emptying , the characterisation of an abnormality of gastric emptying in a patient with non-ulcer dyspepsia does not necessarily provide a key to effective treatment .
16 If the client informs its trading partners before entering into a contract that it will not insist on the strict letter of the terms , it may be estopped from relying on their letter ; similarly , if the client describes the effect of a term , a court may hold that the client is bound by that description and can only enforce the term to the extent of that description ( Curtis v Chemical Cleaning and Dyeing Co Ltd [ 1951 ] 1 KB 805 ) .
17 Brunnson therefore does an excellent job of distinguishing between the formulation and implementation of ideologies , helping us to begin to see how corporate rational analysis and the organizational perspectives may fit together , but his thesis does not sufficiently recognize the degree to which both rationality and negotiation may still underlie the establishment of his ideologies .
18 Innocently I point out that we 'd better return the key to him , since if we leave the flat unattended he could say we stole his best furniture .
19 Note that this option will only enable a module to be read from LIFESPAN and updated .
20 The holiday was one I have always dreamed about and I would highly recommend the centre to any outdoor enthusiast .
21 You 'd better have a talk to it , then .
22 ‘ You 'd better have the afternoon to yourself as I imagine the heat and humidity must be hitting you , ’ she decided , preparing to depart .
23 Understood in this way a duty to serve the interests of the enterprise can sensibly only mean a duty to further the commercial success of the business .
24 Dimension does not merely mean the space to be filled .
25 However , LIFESPAN will only allow the DC to be updated provided :
26 The best exercise for the lateral deltoid is dumb-bell side-lateral raises ( remember to only raise the arms to the horizontal because after this the upper trapezius will be used ) , The posterior deltoid is the least enjoyable to train , but should never be missed out .
27 I thought I 'd better add a rider to that , it was easy to be male and misunderstood around here .
28 New funding arrangements for community care will not necessarily put a stop to such perverse incentives and may indeed provide further scope for cost shifting .
29 Even so , it should not be assumed that the abolition of public examinations would necessarily put an end to transmission styles of teaching .
30 … Now , in this case , it was agreed , that the defendant should quit at Candlemas ; and though the agreement is void as to the number of years for which the defendant was to hold , if the lessor chooses to determine the tenancy before the expiration of the seven years , he can only put an end to it at Candlemas .
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