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

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1 The Taoiseach , Albert Reynolds , strongly supported the scheme to attract money back into the country , while it was opposed by the Finance Minister , Bertie Ahern , and most of the Labour Party Ministers in the Coalition Government .
2 All her creditors were asked to execute the Debt of Trust , and agree to accept payment out of the Trust Estate .
3 £4bn to pull Industry out of the doldrums
4 And if you think I 'm going to bail Sleet out with the money Francis left me when you ca n't even be bothered to learn the most basic elements of running an estate then you 're mistaken . ’
5 He 'd tried to frighten Jacqui off with the telephone messages and vicious note , but if she persisted …
6 There are , however , several situations in which the Commission is bound to pass information on to the competition authorities of member states .
7 We filled that and while they were eating that we kept the hay , hay , cut it through a rick , a big thin knife , you know , fill the remainder of the racks with the hay , so that by the time they 'd gone and finished that they 'd gone in to eat the hay , then we 'd got the yard free to litter it out , and to straw it on both sides , one would be on the , one down on the bottom to pull straw down into the yard , and that was .
8 This is a world where document management and revision tracking are probably more important than the finer points of typography , the ability to pull information out of the corporate data base more vital than a range of typefaces and sizes .
9 That vast organization is as amorphous and as difficult to impose discipline on as the legislature ; from the most senior to some quite junior levels , there are many opportunities for bureaucrats to undermine and defeat a president 's purposes .
10 In recent years there have certainly been dramatic moves to open sport up to the forces of the market .
11 One takes a high level reservoir and if there is more electricity available than the demand requires , then some of that can be used to pump water up into the high level down .
12 A partial answer to this problem was the building of hundreds of windmills to pump water back into the specially constructed drainage channels , and these were succeeded by steam pumps ( see Stretham ) .
13 I have a headache and am concerned that the wind has dehydrated me ; it is so important to pour liquid down in the Arctic , especially in winter .
14 He says there ai n't nothing else next and er so er I stood there and I said this , kind of like this I 've got ta do something so er I went er to pick sommat up down the back but before that he said , here you are , he says I put these ready all you got ta do is put the screws in those locks you know , like .
15 The lid should be metal or plastic with a metal lining to reflect radiation back into the computer .
16 It is a very useful behaviour when trying to get to the bottom of things and when you need to tease information out of the other person .
17 It was a warm sunny evening on September 18th 1989 when I went to fetch Copper in from the paddock for his evening exercise before settling him down in his nice fresh shavings bed for the night .
18 He used to play centre back in the youth cup winning juniors team .
19 The irony of the position described by my hon. Friend the Member for Makerfield ( Mr. McCartney ) is that , if Wigan had received the same amount in grant as was received by Wandsworth and Westminster in the year in which it was capped , it would not have had to levy a tax at all ; indeed , it might have been able to give money back from the previous year 's levy .
20 She went into the kitchen , washed her hands , and began to put bacon on to the grill .
21 And I 'm proud of what I 've done and delighted that this enables me to put cash back into the game . ’
22 Two excellent goals from Steve Aries added to an early strike from Liam Herbert to put Town back on the winning trail .
23 It wants to give tourism back to the GLC , yet the only contribution that the GLC made to tourism was to destabilise and almost destroy the London tourist board .
24 ‘ I know what their intentions are , which are to enhance the individual 's life so that collectively we are all enhanced — to try to do stuff out of the mould of the old politics , which the three main parties are dealing with .
25 Signing the Sex Pistols , Branson reasoned , was the way to put Virgin back on the map .
26 Many favour using massed war engines to rain doom down on the enemy , while others prefer fast-moving cavalry armies able to respond to any threat .
27 But the Guider and all the Pack learned later on about her meeting with the stranger on the seat , because at the next Pack Meeting the Guider read out a letter from Mr. Bishop , the estate agent , which said the Earl of Ferngrove had given special instructions that the Brownie Guide Pack could continue to use the Park whenever they wished , as he was quite satisfied , thanks to a chat he 'd had with one of them , that they were very careful not to leave litter about in the Park .
28 Er but basically you 're going to give land back to the people who are tilling it because that 's what they , they have an attachment to .
29 Unisys Corp , ICL and DEC were all very happy to see Unix out of the hands of AT&T/NCR .
30 His words were the signal for Lord Hartington to send champagne in to the press room at Cheltenham , acknowledging the role of journalists in drawing attention to the problem .
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