Example sentences of "[vb -s] [pers pn] [adv] to the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 In the hit movie Withnall and I , the two visit Riggindale and it drives them almost to the brink of distraction .
2 bows you down to the ground , bows you weeping
3 The lady accompanies him back to the Alps , to wait and worry as he and his partner , Hansi Kirchner , set off up the virgin North Face of Versücherin .
4 It can not , except in a thoroughly perverted form , be a satisfactory instrument for party political indoctrination and it can not live happily in a situation which subjects it continually to the harsher pressures of party political confrontation . ’
5 After a while he opens his case , takes out a glass vial and holds it up to the light .
6 Simpson raises his hands in the air , United have got Andy Melville and Steve Foster at the far post , Simpson still delays taking the kick , now it comes in , he knocks it in to the far post , looking for Paul , Paul heads it back over the top — and they 've scored .
7 Each ship is built for the coronation of the ruler and on his or her death bears them off to the Isle of the Dead to rest at last with the ancient rulers of Ulthuan .
8 It spots already compressed files ( ZIP and ARJ and the like , as well as LZH compressed TIF files and so forth ) and just passes them through to the hard disk unaltered .
9 As an alternative , radio versions are now available at economic prices ; these allow virtually unrestricted movement to the wearer , the signals being picked up by a special receiver which passes them on to the camcorder via a short cable connection .
10 Their views are then taken forward to the Central Association which passes them on to the Bank through forums such as the Joint Consultative Committee .
11 Responsibility for waste will rest on the person who produces it , and everyone who handles it through to the process of disposal or reclamation .
12 In every generation , REPRODUCTION takes the genes that are supplied to it by the previous generation , and hands them on to the next generation but with minor random errors — mutations .
13 Before waiting for an answer she takes me by the hand and leads me on to the dance floor .
14 yes and that , that in a way leads me on to the next party , if we 're gon na have an agreement between this group or , you know , the other group
15 The hon. Member for Tayside , North ( Mr. Walker ) talked about subsidies , and that leads me straight to the idea which has sometimes been muttered during the debate — that the mines should not have a subsidy .
16 She skips and twists among them , sniffing their hind-quarters , until at last she finds the two she seeks , her own young , and leads them away to the shade of a bush and there lets them suckle .
17 Erm yeah it 's a , again , a very straightforward shot of a very well internationally known landmark erm but I think to stand sort of at an angle to this bridge , sort of , so you 're , the bridge leads you up to the archway underneath the tower is a nice viewpoint .
18 This suggestion leads us on to the subject of the next chapter : the issue of how one uses authority .
19 Which leads us on to the big selling point of these guitars , since this is the first time a production Telecaster has been fitted with a five-way switch .
20 But the notion of the ‘ analytic ’ graduate also raises some difficult questions about the impact of the undergraduate curriculum on student development , which leads us on to the next chapter .
21 This consideration leads us on to the third major argument supporting secularism , that based on a lively concern for justice , peace , goodwill and genuine respect for people .
22 erm Sorry , I think we 'll just stick with Faulkner for a moment , because I think that leads us on to the constant tragedies of battle casualties , which were obviously very much brought in into Oxford whenever people were wounded outside they were often brought in to Oxford to be cared for , there was a hospital out of Yarnton too , but a great many were cared for all over Oxford , and the greatest of course were buried at Christchurch .
23 And that , of course , leads us back to the question : ‘ Where are they all ? ’
24 This view is pervasive amongst ordinary members of the RUC and leads us directly to the issue of how Northern Ireland 's divisions affect policemen and women , which the following chapters begin to address .
25 Such criticism leads us directly to the higher plains of aestheticism from where it becomes possible to adopt a universal outlook , a point of view based on the sort of timeless values that enable one to study objectively ( unsentimentally , unemotionally and ‘ without rancour ’ ) the lower depths of social reality .
26 This leads us directly to the topic of symbols and their meanings .
27 This last point leads us directly to the question of the problematic ending to the story .
28 Like those of neighbouring Bouzy , they possess qualities somewhere between the solid , full-bodied and strongly perfumed Verzenay and the smooth , exceptionally aromatic Aÿ but their great strength and vinosity edges them closer to the former than the latter .
29 And it was suggested by the er two officers that were present , that that could , that money that 's already there , could in fact get a third of the scheme done , the third which was the bisecting little path , the main trees across the front , and the bit of the paving that takes you over to the North Road .
30 where the dropped kerb is , that takes you on to the private road .
  Next page