Example sentences of "[adv] [adv prt] to [noun sg] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | All I want to see you better back to school and back to your fitness again . |
2 | It stretched from the infancy of radio broadcasting in the early twenties right through to television and the present day . |
3 | The Me109s swept away out to sea and made no attempt to turn for a further attack . |
4 | People were moving slowly off to east and west . |
5 | Painting food colour directly on to icing and marzipan instead of kneading it in has a number of advantages . |
6 | But going for gold these days is more down to money than motivation . |
7 | The reality could not be more down to earth and straightforward , though there is much more to this player than meets the eye . |
8 | They are still down to earth but holy as well . |
9 | He was always down to earth and had very little imagination . |
10 | What it can offer will be illustrated in case studies below , but can be summed up as a general information carrier , providing instant access to a variety of information which is more up to date than printed sources an educational service , providing information on new technology , higher education , careers , educational developments and new educational products a gateway service , providing access to remote databases such as ECCTIS ( see below ) a service providing access to other viewdata systems via Bulletin ( W.M. ) , Monitel a mailbox facility , allowing electronic communication between schools and other users and providing contact points for school librarians and teachers a software service providing telesoftware and enabling users to obtain access to software via Prestel Education and Micronet a microviewdata service , allowing users to create their own databases through Prestel |
11 | ‘ This will make it quite comprehensive and right up to date , more up to date than the published version of the Official Journal , ’ he said . |
12 | I think you 'll find , but they might be more up to date than Mike |
13 | I mean the book itself is just published last , er Thursday I believe it was , and er so it was up to date , is up to date until the summer , which is you know more up to date than any other book , so it 's got things like : Greta Garbo dying , and Princess Eugenie being born and Nelson Mandela being free , and of course it 's the first encyclopaedia to have all the details of nineteen eighty nine , the , the upheaval in , in Europe , all the political changes and whatever . |
14 | But the waitresses in Marshall and Snelgrove had new uniforms , dark purple instead of the old coffee-cream shade , and a different style of cap , more up to date and less obtrusive . |
15 | She hoped his maps were more up to date and accurate than the one she had bought at the newsstand . |
16 | Answer guide : This information tends to be more up to date and detailed as compared to published accounting information . |
17 | She added : ‘ It 's more up to Rock than anybody else . |
18 | A wayward child , forever up to mischief and straining at the bit to dash around , is not necessarily hyperactive . |
19 | By the same token , however , they may now be tacking fitfully back to growth while Germany and , to a lesser extent Japan , linger in relative doldrums . |
20 | The wind was driving me further out to sea and my boat began to fill with water . |
21 | Lining the walls of the display hall are a long series of photographs and displays which trace not just the history of Yakovlev but the whole history of Soviet aviation , both civil and military , from the very earliest days right up to date and covering significant events through the years . |
22 | Because the phallic stage of sexual development continues for the Australian aborigines right up to puberty and because resolution of the Oedipus complex can not occur until initiation , it follows as a matter of inexorable logic that a latency period recognizable as a consequence of a culturally induced culmination of the Oedipal stage can not be expected . |
23 | The survivors I have interviewed mostly remembered going straight on to piece-work and staying there , although in larger offices , like Clark 's , some experienced Women workers did become stab hands . |
24 | Yes , just go straight on to policy and resources , we we have to take it with the main motion , I mean if it 's passed it 's a s standing motion . |
25 | I just took the lift straight down to reception and went home . ’ |
26 | I straight in to yellow or yellow to orange . |
27 | A radio paging system means staff can be bleeped when needed , all they have to do is go to the nearest intercom substation and they are straight through to reception or the management office . |
28 | Goes straight up to heaven and nothing more is heard of it . |
29 | ELISABETH DANZIGER STOOD AT THE OPEN window and watched the gulls swoop round the house , fly straight out to sea and then drop suddenly for prey . |
30 | No , well mostly toilet in the middle of the night but I go straight back to bed and go back to sleep again . |