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

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1 Her persistent phone calls and the risk of public disclosure unsettled Jack Kennedy and he was happy to pass Marilyn over to brother Bobby , who apparently consummated their relationship parked in a car outside the same brother-in-law 's beach house in Santa Monica .
2 If attitudes change and , with the need to attract people back to work , they may have to , then company creches could soon be as common as canteens .
3 For the sake of convenience future references to article 10 in this judgment should be deemed to include reference also to article 19 .
4 ICAS welcomed the review but also said it was a timely reminder of archaic and unnecessary burdens in the UK tax system and urged an independent examination by a working party of all interested bodies to tackle problems close to home .
5 ‘ When you did n't show up to see Kirsty off to school this morning , I thought you might have caught an early flight back to London . ’
6 ‘ It 's Inge 's job to see Kirsty off to school . ’
7 Every morning since she 'd been here , apart from today , she 'd been up bright and early to see Kirsty off to school .
8 To help addicts back to health , many of the ‘ anonymous ’ organisations use a 12-step plan pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous .
9 Yet Chapman saw that the future of English football ultimately depended on the young , and he was particularly concerned to win youngsters over to soccer and away from rugby , a concern heightened by the fact that his two sow , Ken and Bruce , were distinguishing themselves in the rugby code .
10 This drive to help people back to work is equally evident in the success of the Job Search Seminars which were held this year and funded by Employment Services .
11 But although Darwinian natural selection seems plainly to deny primacy either to egoism or to altruism , it is interesting to notice that nearly everyone has preconceptions which hinder him from coming fully to terms with the evidence .
12 Now is the time to take rubbish to the dump , to give things away to charity shops and jumble sales .
13 Repeat as 1 but , when dropping arms , continue movement to extend arm sideways to shoulder height .
14 To run cable down to light switches or to wall lights , it will usually be necessary to ‘ chase ’ slots in solid walls , though if you are rewiring a house which was originally wired in metal conduit , you may be able to use the existing conduit buried in the plaster leading to light switches to feed the cable down .
15 Some PROs have even been known to send pictures out to radio stations !
16 This helps to keep families up to date with the thinking of the school and strengthens the sense of identity .
17 Of course it is very hard for the writers because they have to keep things up to date and follow the story-lines .
18 War on the ground is really a man with a large field with curved corrugated metal huts to keep pigs in to grub all the vegetation off to feed them up to get themselves eaten by other men to help those men to have the energy to work to make the curved corrugated metal huts and grow other food in other fields that gets eaten by another lot of men who leave some of it to feed back to the pigs .
19 The group had to make contact with an American unit willing to keep staff up to date with the very latest developments .
20 Harrods , which last year refused entry to Jason Donovan , the singer , because he was wearing torn denims , said the guidelines were part of a programme to keep staff up to date with the latest styles .
21 The Head Girl who was so anxious to shepherd Mary back to heterosexuality was Doris Birch .
22 Three new courses to keep teachers up to date lead to one-year certificates or two-year diplomas in English in the primary school , drama in education and a revamped course in science for primary teachers .
23 We are likely to see more agreements offering better deals to part-timers , to entice mothers back to work , as the demographic changes begin to bite .
24 Mrs Woods , of Bridlington , refused to send Tommy back to school until she was guaranteed he would be allowed to sit with the other children .
25 Everyone 's position was dubious in some respect : no one had been able to stand aloof from the efforts of Philip and Mary to turn England back to popery , and all except the few convinced Romanists in the village hoped that the days of compulsory religion and inquisitions would now be over .
26 Andy has a large input to the design side , having the enjoyment of being able to turn ideas in to reality and then use them to give a financial return .
27 The U.S. studies have drawn attention to the use of glycol ethers — solvents used to etch circuits on to silicon wafers .
28 Again , consistency when training is important , and it is generally better not to allow dogs on to furniture .
29 Ms Armstrong said : ‘ Good provision of nursery places for young children is crucial to allow women back to work .
30 Francis has got to try to get Hirst back to business quickly , and the player himself should realise that this dream of glory can become reality under the guidance of Francis .
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