Example sentences of "[adv] [vb -s] [adj] [noun] to " in BNC.

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1 Vegetable juice is even less desirable , and the resulting plant print rarely has any relevance to the text Elizabeth Barrett Browning gave us a gentle reminder in Aurora Leigh :
2 The physical care of frail old people necessarily involves much attention to food and to toileting .
3 The Sir Eric Rideal Trust annually offers financial assistance to promising academic research workers , including research students , in the general field of colloid and surface science to attend conferences and to visit relevant research institutions .
4 This obviously adds great weight to its publications , in that they clearly have wide acceptance amongst those involved in the building process .
5 This all has great relevance to the regular runner as you will soon see .
6 The process produces no new proteins , it only causes physical changes to existing structures .
7 She only has other people to her house .
8 Space only allows brief reference to these issues here .
9 Further , the need for averaging obviously favours repetitive responses to repetitive stimuli and neural events that do not correlate in a consistent time-locked way with external stimuli will necessarily be overlooked .
10 In this respect , and in the broader feathers of the wing , this bird perhaps shows more affinity to the gallinaceous family than any other of the Struthionidae . ’
11 As the hon. Gentleman obviously takes econometric models to bed with him , I wonder whether he would look at the implications of Liberal Democrat policy on one of the small industries to which his party is committed — the armed forces .
12 This principle does not limit the processing of data , it merely requires such activities to be registered , in accordance with the requirements of the Data Protection Act 1984 .
13 Apart from more money , the Premier League merely means irritating changes to the footballing language .
14 Thus ns.20A not only gives congressional backing to the misappropriation theory but also reverses the rule in Moss v.
15 Eastham parish church , tucked away behind a farmyard , sometimes only attracts 8 worshippers to services .
16 ‘ My aeroplane , which also comes from the States , only does eight miles to the gallon . ’
17 The trouble is it only does ten miles to the gallon . ’
18 Simply by carrying out its day-to-day operations , an organisation necessarily communicates certain messages to those who interact with it .
19 In full breeding plumage Common normally has dark tip to bill , but Arctic normally does not ; in winter both have blackish bills .
20 Perhaps Margaret just wants that corpse to be her husband 's , to give her something to grieve over .
21 I just wonder at the necessity of it in an area that already has two golf-courses to its credit .
22 What is perhaps most curious about the characterization of Margery after the trick has been played is that she very soon drops all reference to — and therefore seems to be portrayed as forgetting — the threat she believes the clerk to pose .
23 An O licence normally authorizes more vehicles to be operated than are listed from the start .
24 Highlands and Islands Enterprise already allocates three points to the general SVQ at level I.
25 He held her in his arms , still and warm , and after a while in that darkness he felt as though he held nothing at all ; it was like when a limb , having been left in the same position for too long a time , somehow loses all reference to the body , and for those instants before some willed movement the very location and attitude of that arm or leg is quite unknown .
26 It is interesting but true that such a harsh review normally reduces initial differences to an extent that allows a firm TAC view to come through .
27 As for the release of information , the stock exchange points out that it already requires price-sensitive information to be published through its regulated news service .
28 Now that 's probably not really true — it just seems that way to him !
29 However , the hard truth is that Parliament generally pays little attention to the working of the law .
30 The Tories , and their ruling-class supporters , wish to keep the ordinary worker from knowing what the substance of this social chapter is , how it really just gives more backing to much of what they have already gained through industrial struggles for nearly 200 years , and the extension of these rights to every worker , especially the more isolated ones .
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