Example sentences of "[noun sg] [noun sg] [adv prt] to [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | We helped to ensure that cricket will continue by assisting both Tudhoe and Spennymoor clubs and also that league football survives by helping to bring the Brewery Field up to standard . |
2 | We helped to ensure that cricket will continue by assisting both Tudhoe and Spennymoor clubs and also that league football survives by helping to bring the Brewery Field up to standard . |
3 | West Coast up to date . |
4 | The orders came from Command right down to squadron level ; the preparations started about mid-morning as soon as this vast sheet of paper from the teleprinter indicating every facet of the job ahead arrived . |
5 | And three-year-old Louis brought Britain 's Olympic silver medallist down to earth with a bump when they clashed . |
6 | If we had started on week one , where if we 'd had complete programme information up to week thirteen when , that 'd be more complete would n't it ? |
7 | After the new student experiences his first free sparring fight , he returns to his daily training with an intensified ardour , determined to correct his shortcomings in order to get his fighting application up to standard for the next sparring session . |
8 | At lower latitudes , the hours of daylight increase up to midsummer but never obliterate the night , while sunlight penetrates even in the middle of winter . |
9 | convert carbon dioxide not , not , not carbon dioxide back to oxygen ca n't they ? |
10 | Our second day had been ‘ earmarked ’ fora boat trip out to Volunteer Point to see the king penguins , and as it is an open beach , landing is always subject to wind and sea conditions . |
11 | To her annoyance Holly pushed the carbon copy on to Rain 's desk and went away with the other . |
12 | He used to say that he wanted to give prose the strength and stature of poetry ; but part of this project seemed to include first cutting poetry down to size . |
13 | Sabine put her chicken casserole on to cook , then made up her bed . |
14 | Actually , this is a bit optimistic because we have assumed that the material will go on obeying Hooke 's law right up to failure . |
15 | This section brings discussion on the process of central government management reform up to date by reviewing developments since 1980 . |
16 | Statutory water quality objectives will be established and £28 billion will be invested to bring bathing and drinking water up to standard by the mid-1990s . |
17 | Replace badly furred-up pipes ( or get a specialist firm in to descale the system ) and consider changing to an indirect system and/or installing a water softener ( page 42 ) . |
18 | Overheats and it would melt , so because of that they put a little protector thing on to cut out a thermal cut out to stop the current flowing |
19 | As you wind the carriage along the needlebed , the transfer needle on the rib transfer carriage ( it 's a different design to the knitting needles ) , moves vertically downwards and pushes the ribber needle back to working position . |
20 | In addition to the obvious costs of hardware/software , greater disciplines would have to be imposed on all users of the filing systems in order to keep the computer record up to date ; for example , all movements of files in and out from their home base would have to be logged by the user , including branch officers who have direct access to outposted files . |
21 | ’ She looks like a Scripture mistress out to grass . ’ |
22 | On to the matter of composting garden waste , then the waste disposal off to landfill from household rescue could be reduced by about twenty five per cent if garden waste was separate County Council refuse site and composted . |
23 | If we approach these tensions from the perspective of assuming that these represent the dialectical poles , or at least some of them ( for of course others could be discussed here had we the space : for example the tension between " knowing how " and " knowing that " in design activity ) of a design activity which encompasses all of these in a vertical moment of synthesis , a synthesis that is counterposed horizontally ( ie over time ) by the changing movements of the activity itself ( from product critique through to problem definition to cognitive modeling of potential solutions etc ) , a movement of understanding and practice which parallels in its sphere the circle of historical understanding and historical praxis ( and just as the latter is the " way in which history itself moves " so the former is the " way praxis itself moves " ) so design can be seen as embodying that movement in its movement from or across actuality ie in its activity of transformation from one set of " givens " to another ; in its movement from problem to product . |
24 | What you need to know about now is how to bring your practice and your registration status up to date , and the different routes of re-entry available to you . |
25 | But on 13 January 1975 ‘ Laura Ashley ’ was convicted and fined at Newtown Magistrates Court for discharging waste matter on to land . |
26 | Governments — tax evasion through to avoidance especially for transnational corporations ( Vanick 1977 ) ; illegal campaign funds to politicians in return for promises ( Chambliss 1978 ) ; bribing state officials in return for later lucrative employment ; fraudulent information to prevent , influence , or repeal legislation ( Schrag and Divoky 1981 : 94–127 ; Sunday Times Insight Team 1979 : 90–116 ; Ungar 1972 ) ; exporting illegal behaviour to another state where it is not illegal ( Braithwaite 1979b ) ; fraudulent billing of government body ( Klass 1975 ; Vaughan 1980 ) . |
27 | If those at the Tate do not believe that the acquisition of one picture a year is sufficient to keep its contemporary art collection up to date , the Government could tell them to use the powers in the Bill to dispose of works of art . |
28 | Spitzer produces his drawings in a darkroom by applying a titanium mixture on to parchment , which gradually turns black in daylight . |
29 | A water authority will , therefore , be in breach of its statutory duty if it permits obnoxious odours , which amount to a nuisance at common law , to emanate either from its sewage disposal works , or due to any recycling of treated or untreated sewage sludge on to farm land , and it is open to a local authority or person aggrieved , in the absence of informal agreement perhaps via a Liaison Committee , to seek an injunction to restrain the water authority from causing the nuisance . |
30 | The five mile walk back to town seemed more attractive . |