Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv] to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 and goes right to that wall does n't it ?
2 17.2.2 refers expressly to this agreement and
3 From this one can infer that it belongs chronologically to that transition period in Spanish ceramics when the displaced potters of Malaga had set up afresh in Valencia but were still using the traditional designs of Andalusia in their new environment .
4 Gastritis with atrophy and the consequent loss of acid mediated inhibition of gastrin release contributes most to this increase .
5 There remains the question as to the position where such a vessel belongs wholly to one person .
6 The domination of finance capital and of capital in general is not to be abolished by any reforms in the sphere of political democracy ; and self-determination belongs wholly to this sphere .
7 The industry contributes widely to academic research .
8 Though the Laffer curve strictly refers only to overall tax level , and not that for any particular tax .
9 This Report refers only to these sewage works discharging directly the almond .
10 You have a bank account where either of you can sign , one dies the other can still sign and therefore it belongs entirely to that survivor .
11 As this has been achieved with a style of football that owes little to romantic idealism , Charlton is not in trouble-free waters although even his most vigorous detractors are now inclined to take a pragmatic stance , appeased by success and forced to accept his widespread popularity .
12 Profile reveals that new Polo owes much to old car ; driving position good , as is rear entry with low lip ; GT engine gives 75bhp
13 ( One tenth of a turn corresponds approximately to 500 gamma , the full range covering 100,000 gamma ) .
14 This corresponds more to economic arithmetic than to economic analysis , and more sophisticated approaches look to evaluation by reference to the tools developed in chapter 6 on cost-benefit analysis .
15 The same might be said of Neville Brody whose typography for The Face owes more to computer-operated typesetting than to calligraphy .
16 Late twentieth-century work design owes more to scientific management than to Herzberg or Emery .
17 ‘ All I wanted to say was — her life is devoted to serving and servicing others — and the book shows that by playing that role that that role adds more to human happiness and richness than anything else .
18 ‘ Reader ’ corresponds to Full Professor in North American usage while Lecturer corresponds roughly to Associate Professor . )
19 In his diaries he looks forward to future success , but it was his artistic success that he sought before financial security .
20 It is a type of formative assessment , insofar as it looks ahead to future learning activities , but differs in that it usually involves the use of more specific procedures or protocols .
21 Curran 's arrival brings the number of new signings at Scarborough this week to five as boss Ray McHale looks ahead to next season .
22 The confidential world of the city clerk persists in Eliot 's poorest play which looks again to Victorian melodrama .
23 Using interactive , multimedia for marketing purposes refers largely to interactive point-of-sale ( POS ) and point-of-information ( POI ) systems .
24 What happens further to small mammal bone before it is buried and fossilized depends in part on what happened to it at earlier stages in the transition from living animal to fossil ( Fig. 1.2 ) .
25 The lyrics are pleasantly vague except for the curiously annoyed ‘ Candy Everybody Wants ’ , which veers close to wounded cynicism and nothing much else happens .
26 of imported coal goes directly to British Steel and that that coal is not currently available in the United Kingdom ?
27 There is only the conductor-CEO — and every one of the musicians plays directly to that person without an inter-mediary .
28 So technology that builds the boats leads directly to biological adaptation and evolution .
29 This leads inevitably to great simplification or stylization , and , at the same time , to a clarification and accentuation of what are felt to be the significant features or details of the object depicted .
30 Overlooking the causal nature of meaning with respect to usage leads here to obvious circularity within the formal framework however : to is first defined as necessary to support a clausal complement with no discussion of the data which contradict this postulate ( cf She helped lift him out of the bed ; You 've missed things .
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