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

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1 The holder of a licence or a club can disapply the section to premises by giving notice specifying the date of disapplication which fulfils the requirements of subs .
2 A licensing board may disapply the section to premises at any time if they cease to be satisfied that the requirements of the proviso to subs .
3 Where gamma equals one we have naive expectations so , d' you think that what that implies in the top equation , right the revision to expectations and gamma equals one is the whole of the difference between actual predicted last year okay .
4 Senior ministers are determined that the major lenders will pass on the cuts to customers as soon as possible .
5 The most hair-raising operation at Honister was not digging the slate , but getting it down the fells to sheds where the material was riven and dressed for transportation by packhorse to ports and river barges .
6 So the injunction to directors is that they must act bona fide in what they , and not the court , thinks are the best interests of the company .
7 ‘ Royal ’ arrest An Australian farmer and his wife who declared their Queensland farm an independent country , calling themselves the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough , have been arrested for defying a court order to hand over the property to receivers .
8 That not the obedience to rules , but the ‘ sense of honour ’ enables agents to ‘ engender all the practices consistent with the logic of challenge and riposte ’ .
9 Thus , the total quantity of pollution is regulated , but firms that can cheaply reduce pollution have an incentive to do so , and sell off the ERC to firms for which pollution reduction is more expensive .
10 As Farrah 's parents went through hell , Caren McSweeney showed off the six-month-old to customers at an Irish pub claiming she was called Chloe .
11 He hopes the poster will drive home the message to youngsters that drugs are certainly not the key to success .
12 He can work up the ocean to scuds of foam when he 's cross .
13 Climb straight up the V-groove to ledges ( more fulmars ) than take the short crack above or the ramp on the left to finish .
14 We went up the hotel to meals
15 Miss Southworth said the woman had made up the story to friends and was then forced to go through with it , after complaints were made to the police .
16 He opened up the Museum to scholars and architectural historians by writing many articles on Soane and his collections for the architectural press in the 1920s and also embarked on a series of publications about Soane : The Works of Sir John Soane ( 1924 ) , an edition of Soane 's Royal Academy Lectures on Architecture ( 1929 ) and The Portrait of Sir John Soane ( 1927 ) , as well as a number of pamphlets .
17 Top-up arrangements are not permitted as part of a tender offer ( SAR 4.1(c) ) so the buyer could not make up the difference to shareholders who have already sold if a full bid on improved terms is made subsequently .
18 It was not far enough , as there was still downward straggle , so we moved further up the ladder to cubes .
19 These roads open up the rainforest to waves of settlers who move into the forests and clear even more land by fire .
20 I had wanted to spend some time with the Infierno people themselves ; but , caught between two worlds , they had a very understandable fear of their traditional knowledge being ‘ stolen ’ , and did not open up the project to outsiders without good reason .
21 It was a turning point for the business and set Thomas Cook on the road to opening up the world to men and women who had not dreamed of travelling before .
22 The Financial Times of June 28 described this review clause " ploy " as designed " to hold out the hope to countries which feel their aspirations unsatisfied in this constitutional revision that they may do better next time " .
23 He claimed that his governing body , the UK Central Council for Nurses and Midwives , recommended that at least two nurses gave out the drugs to patients .
24 Occasionally you had to spell out the name to tourists to avoid any needless confusion .
25 It 's the first time the Rothmans chairman has spelt out the risk to jobs from Labour 's policy .
26 So often the parties to disputes make the mistake of not being crystal-clear about the bottom line .
27 In such cases it may be often difficult to say whether he is intended to be an arbitrator or to exercise some function other than that of an arbitrator. borderline cases identified above ( 15.7.7 ) , particularly the reference to experts of general disputes ( 6.9 ) .
28 Sometimes the rags to riches progress of a dish is reversed .
29 Well , if I may , Chair , I would like deal with it in terms of the principle or the policy and then the application to highways planning .
30 This includes estimates of how the returns to policyholders have been reduced by the effect of expenses and charges incurred by the life assurance company .
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