Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [vb base] to a " in BNC.

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1 So we come to a somewhat catastrophic attitude to evolution .
2 Apart from demonstrating one of the unwavering laws of British journalism , that nothing sells newspapers like royalty , and nothing makes a better editorial column than declamations of simple patriotism , the curious thing about these assaults is how much they belong to a period .
3 So they come to a cliff and she looks at her and she goes , she goes what are you doing ?
4 Thus together they amount to a concerted attempt to investigate whether or not any form of vertical behaviour is to be allowed .
5 while directly above I bend to a bottom drawer
6 Thus we come to a more general and tenable version of dualism : that every writer necessarily makes choices of expression , and that it is in these choices , in his " way of putting things " , that style resides .
7 Now , it 's a bit different , because normally we apply to a job in Glasgow , we might get it or we might not , but , you look at , we 've got more of , of information , but , in less developed countries , that information is , even if it were collected , sometimes it 's not even collected , erm , it 's not widely available , so people 's perceptions or hearsay from people who 've gone before , is the information , and that 's often erm , wrong .
8 Harry will probably get over his affection for Lucy once we return to a normal life again .
9 Still more rarely we go to a place simply because of what someone has written about it and that journey becomes both an expression of gratitude and a way of filling a need within ourselves .
10 Later they move to a lateral position , with the woman applying squeeze control when required .
11 Now I stick to a handful of charities which I support regularly . ’
12 Now we come to a time when relationships can give extreme joy or extreme pain .
13 Mr Hardiman took off his spectacles again , and waved them in the air as he continued : ‘ Now we come to a more problematic matter .
14 Now we come to a very attractive idea .
15 If I saw the duck-rabbit as a rabbit , then I saw : these shapes and colours ( I give them in detail ) — and I saw besides something like this : and here I point to a number of different pictures of rabbits .
16 Here we submit to a deep sea-change of hormonal rhythms and intestinal flora — and prepare ourselves for unknown months of deep immersion amongst the wilder regions of the archipelago .
17 Here we come to a delicate area .
18 ‘ I thought maybe I go to a party , ’ he explains , ‘ so I bring bottle from aeroplane .
19 So now can you see how politically , there is a kind of political subtext to this section erm as I say you can only follow it so far down a road then you come to a dead end but I think it 's there and you ca n't really ignore it , the political subtext .
20 Butchers and er then there was the butchers and that was on the corner of and er and and then cross over there towards Street you 've got the stores , then you come the , the er drapers , then er Tommy the butcher who was my first wife 's uncle and then you come to a shop which was owned by one or two people , which was a sort of er general store and then my mother-in-law 's shop a cook 's which was
21 Erm then we get to a rather inter funny bit really .
22 That maybe they get to a certain time when they 're going to be out of touch ?
23 People do n't mind being referred if it 's something that is genuinely but say they phone Leeds and Leeds do n't know and Leeds refer them to a number they think it is and then they refer to a third number then somebody gets .
24 Subjects are given a particular word — let us say the word lead — and then they listen to a pair of sentences and press a button as soon as they hear the target word .
25 All sides are hoping for a successful horse fair this year and that the closest they get to a confrontation is a clash of cultures .
26 All sides are hoping for a successful horse fair this year and that the closest they get to a confrontation is a clash of cultures .
27 If you have grade 1 obesity , it amy take between six weeks and six months ; grade 2 obesity , three to eighteen months ; and grade 3 obesity , on to three years , depending upon your starting weight and closely you adhere to a weight-loss programme .
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