Example sentences of "[verb] to in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The law has not been adhered to in the recent years , as it was in the past and every night when you 're out you usually see more than one cyclist driving without lights , often on the pavement .
2 It is perhaps interesting to note that , despite the urgency of the situation , the convention that the accident investigation authority of one State communicates with the accident investigation authority of another State and the airworthiness authority of one State communicates with the airworthiness authority of another State was adhered to in the alerting procedure .
3 So the total number of biomorphs that we could jump to in a single step is 19 times itself 9 times over : 19 to the power 9 .
4 It was much smaller than she 'd imagined , just a country house , she thought , which had been added to in a haphazard way over the centuries .
5 A DoH press release states that ‘ access to records will be free except when they have not been added to in the previous 40 days .
6 The standard set of Spectrum keys have been added to in an intelligent way too .
7 Many of the towns on the Banbury map which Professor Hoskins referred to in the previous chapter fall into this category .
8 The sisters found him a loner , difficult to relate to in a normal friendly way .
9 Not the cover on him there might have been , the sort of er chance clear chance that was given say to in the local derby match the other Saturday , and really made it count .
10 In certain circumstances it may become necessary to seek waivers from the Law Society , as for instance : ( 1 ) where the new office is no more than a consulting room open for restricted periods , when a waiver would normally be granted provided ( a ) the opening hours are sufficiently advertised ; ( b ) during those hours there is always in attendance a person duly qualified to manage or supervise the office and that all correspondence is seen by a partner of the firm ; and ( c ) the business of the consultancy is accounted for centrally and not as a separate business ; or ( 2 ) where the new office is an annexe ( whether housing a separate department or otherwise ) near to the main office , when a waiver could be expected to be granted if ( a ) a common switchboard is used for both main office and annexe ; ( b ) accounts are centralised ; ( c ) correspondence is attended to in the main office ; and ( d ) clients are asked to address correspondence to the main office .
11 They achieved a masterpiece in the Moorish style in the Plaza de Armas Station , Seville ( 1901 ) , an element of the Iberian past also alluded to in the Moorish elements on the grand Romantic façade of Lisbon 's Rossio Station .
12 The barely submerged class antagonism much alluded to in the local humour is both true and false .
13 This change of emphasis is reflected in the biographical sources and is undoubtedly largely responsible for the marked differences , alluded to in the previous chapter , between the biographies written by Taskopruzade and those by Ata'i .
14 I came to in a dentist-type chair , surrounded by Charlie 's Angels — a pink one , a blue one and a green one .
15 It is clearly under voluntary control : we can decide who to listen to in a crowded room and who to shut out .
16 Nevertheless we were very glad to have someone to talk to in the long reaches of the night when we were struggling to keep our eyes open .
17 Now the authority of the community was carried by the Sanhedrin they brought him to what is what they accepted as a trial erm they 'd assessed that something was going against their structures , and as I 've already said religious life was the most important thing he 'd broken it seems a religious law and the council the court the gathering together of the seventy members of the Sanhedrin were going to in a serious sort of way check this out , check this accusation out .
18 At the US Open at Shinnecock Hills he played the best I 'd ever seen him play — probably even better than he was going to in the British Open .
19 First to go , he does everything he 's told to in a flawless display .
20 Of the other two big continental powers , Germany is busy absorbing the former East German army and cutting the new all-German force to a promised limit of 370,000 men , as agreed to in the European conventional arms-control treaty in Paris last November .
21 Although not all newspapers were affected to the same degree , the trend towards more ‘ sensation ’ and more ‘ sport ’ suggested that the ‘ reader was expected to be intellectually more passive … attracted less by the prospect of greater wisdom than by that of ‘ Elevated ’ status , and he was now appealed to in a shrill capitalised format ’ .
22 ‘ The Black Sea at 24C in the summer is twice what belugas are used to in the Arctic .
23 I 've got enough just to manage , but things are n't what they should be and it 's not what we were used to in the old days . ’
24 We do know that two or three or four may have to in the foreseeable future .
25 I can remember coming to in the intensive care unit at the National Heart .
26 Again , however , there was little to object to in the broad fundamental .
27 It is again an attempt to retreat to the position that only those weapons are prohibited which are specifically referred to in a ratified treaty .
28 In a churchyard at Bilston in Staffordshire stands a memorial to a mother and her two infant children , who all died within a period of three weeks in the winter of 1847 ; they are described as ‘ all victims to the neglect of sanitary regulations specially referred to in a recent lecture on Health in this town . ’
29 That has aroused a great deal of fear and was referred to in a recent Health and Safety Executive report .
30 THE schools-club conflict referred to in a recent column is highlighted by the position in which talented Lisburn batsman Graeme Lyness finds himself .
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