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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The latter would handicap British exports and in either case the benefit to the workers would be illusory .
2 For potential solicitors the apprenticeship to an experienced solicitor in the form of articles of clerkship performs the same function .
3 In March the heir to the throne , Don Juan de Borbón , wrote to Franco suggesting that power be transferred to him .
4 Each place has a special story to tell and offers a new experience of history : from neolithic man to Roman invasion , from William the Conqueror to the Civil War , from the Restoration to Queen Victoria and beyond .
5 In addition the notes to the accounts need not include the directors ' emoluments .
6 In addition the opposition to the belief that studies of Language , Linguistics-based , should be part of the pre-service of teachers , that opposition that was at the time principled , serious and rigorously expressed and is still unanswered .
7 It is extremely unlikely that there will be any difficulty — at a general election the returns to the writs will have identified the winners and , nowadays , the oath is unlikely to present any problems , although it has in the past .
8 COGSA , for example , applies from the time the goods are loaded on board the vessel to the time they are discharged ; i.e. , ’ tackle to tackle . ’
9 Within the EEC the commitment to the Community seemed to be less ; or at least it was rather different .
10 Paula Hamilton is renowned as the actress in the Volkswagen commercial , who storms out of the house and throws away expensive gifts from her lover , except of course the keys to a new car .
11 The Revenue is centralising its cases on this point at claims branch and of course the value to the Revenue of fighting these cases is far greater than the value to individual taxpayers ; on the other hand , the financial risk for the individual taxpayer of being the first to take such a case before the Special Commissioners or higher , would be extremely high .
12 DILEMMA NO MORE AS IBM HANDS THE PRISONERS THE KEY TO THE JAILHOUSE
13 The former measurement is in terms of a value equal to twenty times the logarithm to the base ten of the ratio of the root-means square pressure of a sound to the reference pressure , which is normally taken to be two times ten to the minus five newtons per square metre , and the unit of measurement is on a uniform scale based upon ten times the logarithm to the base ten
14 The former measurement is in terms of a value equal to twenty times the logarithm to the base ten of the ratio of the root-means square pressure of a sound to the reference pressure , which is normally taken to be two times ten to the minus five newtons per square metre , and the unit of measurement is on a uniform scale based upon ten times the logarithm to the base ten
15 On the basis of its dispersion measure of 75.68cm -3 pc , its distance is 1.5kpc , about three times the distance to the Vela pulsar .
16 At present the income to a forester/ farmer was 25% from the forest and 75% from the farm .
17 They make their way down through the courtyard past the concierge 's busy-lizzies and geraniums in their cluster of terracotta and out onto the street where the Mercedes and driver are double-parked squeezing the traffic to an irascible trickle .
18 By killing and dividing the animals the parties to the treaty made it clear that the penalty for breaking the agreement was death .
19 The ERA gives every young citizen the right to a basic curriculum which includes the National Curriculum .
20 This was done by cross-tabulating the answer to the question : ‘ To what extent did you personally feel threatened by the review ? ’ against all the other items in the questionnaire .
21 This approach tends to produce either a weakened bone or subjects the patient to a second operation .
22 PETROMIZER subjects the molecules to a magnetic field .
23 She appears also however to have had in mind the entry to the trade of unequivocally middle-class girls , arguing that " the most cultivated class of women could become proof-readers ( which was almost like " working in publishing " ) .
24 His particular interest , it turns out , is in the ‘ non-You Sonnets ’ , the ‘ dramatic meditations ’ of his title , in other words the exception to the norm , to which he dedicates most of his space , studying in detail Sonnets 94 , 121 , 20 , 129 , and 146 .
25 You first pound the garlic to a mash , then stir in the yolks , add a little salt , then the oil , exactly as for a mayonnaise .
26 A high wall bars any chance of escape to the left and a frosty beech hedge borders the alley to the right .
27 The River Otter , Coleridge 's ‘ dear native brook ’ , borders the town to the west , and makes its leisurely way through a landscape which to eighteenth-century inhabitants seemed ‘ the richest finest Country in the world ’ , and which even now preserves the striking beauty which so impressed itself on Coleridge 's young mind .
28 In addition to a host of talented players from the Italian First Division , which in effect makes the student representative side the understudy to the full Italian XV , the selectors have drafted in a number of seasoned internationals ( nine in all ) , among them classy Milano centre-cum-fly-half Massimo Bonomi and World Cup forwards Massimo Giovancili , Roberto Saetti and Carlo Cecchinato .
29 Throughout the electorate the swing to the Conservatives was stronger amongst those who generally had relatively little interest in politics ; amongst those who did not tune in to watch highbrow television or radio news ; amongst those without professional qualifications ; and amongst those who , despite stating a party preference in 1986 , none the less denied being party ‘ supporters ’ — we can call them politically ‘ uncommitted ’ — even when they had political preferences .
30 In this connection , one opposing clergyman sought the intervention of the courts via an order of mandamus addressed to the Lord Chamberlain that he should present to Her Majesty a petition to the effect that the granting of the Royal Assent to the latter Bill would be contrary to the Act of Settlement 1700 and to Her Majesty 's coronation oath , both of which , he argued , forbade Her from thus imperilling the maintenance of Protestantism .
  Next page