Example sentences of "[vb past] to [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Well that article you referred to at the very beginning of the programme in the Observer , the final part of that article went something like this erm ‘ this article is not intended to accuse individuals or colleges .
2 They soon learn that anyone referred to as a black sheep , is not only different , but is regarded as being in disgrace .
3 Nonetheless , the flow-chart-cum-module model is much more open to interpretation in terms of localization ( if only because both are normally explained and displayed spatially ) , and therefore any explication of consciousness in their terms will tend to be a localized model , or what I referred to as a pinball-machine view of consciousness , one that seems to me a priori implausible .
4 We 've also submitted er on your behalf er motions to the er regional conference er and to the er Cardiff er federal conference , which I mistakenly referred to as a national conference .
5 In the final analysis , collective security was founded on what Nizan referred to as the Soviet formula of " treaties accessible to everyone " , not on the Hitlerian formula of " treaties accessible to a few at the exclusion of everyone else " , Nizan ceaselessly denounced all attempts to reduce international diplomacy to what he disparagingly termed " private agreements between gang leaders " .
6 The notion of power referred to here is that which Lukes referred to as the second dimension of power ( see Ch. 2 ) .
7 Marx predicted that this group , which he referred to as the petty ( or petit ) bourgeoisie , would be progressively squeezed into the proletariat .
8 Nevertheless , he viewed Coenwulf as a tyrant , who had compounded his deficiencies by putting away his wife and taking another ( as Eardwulf had done in Northumbria ) , and urged the Mercian patrician to advise the Mercian people to observe what he referred to as the good and chaste customs of Offa .
9 Unfortunately , he decided to side with Detroit on the day , so that he might be as comfortably partisan as usual , but he did so among a group of Pittsburgh supporters , whom he referred to throughout the same as Pitts-buggers , which did nothing to improve inter-City relations .
10 This is just the same for systems like the Polynesian one , discussed by Engels , where large numbers of people can referred to by the same term as one 's father .
11 Is the environmental assessment to which my hon. Friend referred the same one as that referred to by the hon. Member for Keighley ( Mr. Waller ) who I understood to mean the King 's Cross project , while my hon. Friend was referring to the high-speed link ?
12 And we now know that these ghastly effects are the results of what we referred to in the last lecture endotoxins .
13 This sort of analysis is substantially similar to Jakobson 's discussion of Poe 's ‘ Raven ’ ( Sebeok 1971 : 371–2 ) , which I referred to in the last chapter , and it may well be that the New Critics ' influence lay behind Jakobson 's arguments there .
14 Many of the towns on the Banbury map which Professor Hoskins referred to in the previous chapter fall into this category .
15 Where the pupils referred to in the next section are concerned , their teachers seem to play a larger role in the arbitration of proper action .
16 They should make a bit more profit than they used to with the old , oversized pans they made from bigger oil cans .
17 What 's more , they 're probably incompatible with one another , so connecting them in series ( one after the other ) is going to allow the noise from the first to be amplified and added to by the second .
18 First , the external conditions were extremely unfavourable , given the record trade deficit generated by the ‘ Barber boom ’ and added to by the subsequent massive rise in oil prices .
19 The Northern Line was begun in 1890 but added to throughout the twentieth century until 1941 .
20 Those which have survived have , not unnaturally , been altered and added to in a greater or lesser degree and entirely Romanesque examples are not numerous .
21 After damage in the Fourth Crusade it was further restored and added to in the fourteenth century ( 192 ) .
22 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 .
23 The barely submerged class antagonism much alluded to in the local humour is both true and false .
24 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 .
25 I came to in a dentist-type chair , surrounded by Charlie 's Angels — a pink one , a blue one and a green one .
26 And erm I ca I came to in the first place because it was the best teaching hospital in the Midlands at that time .
27 When it came to within a few days of my scheduled departure date , I said to Michael , ‘ I suppose it 's too late now . ’
28 What happened to with the all-night .
29 Most dishearteningly , Sports Illustrated , the country 's premier sports magazine , sent over ex-Patriot Clive Gammon ( who I talked to at the US-New Zealand and England matches ) but not one line has appeared in the magazine yet .
30 A Toleration Bill went through Parliament fairly quickly , being backed by William and Mary , and agreed to as a necessary concession to the Nonconformists .
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