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

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1 What would he say of the masses of modern art that you have to plug in in order to fully appreciate ?
2 It seemed to me that the theatre I wanted to work in from time to time was the British theatre , so I have never contemplated living in America .
3 The boat hull and light aluminium masks and white roller jibs have to come down in tone to a light grey , and the varnished wood spars have to be darker ochre than those at the top .
4 What you do not want to be told is erm sorry you 've got to come down in person to our offices , they 're in Southend by the way , erm please bring along your passport certificate , D N A chart , and chit signed by erm the spiritual leaders of at least three merger major world religions .
5 At the earlier hearing , Sheriff Reid had heard that Walters had dreamt up the fraud after a Jersey-based financier had failed to come up with cash to back market research for a new board game .
6 Until some genius does so , controversies like the one which surrounded this year 's Mildmay Course at Aintree , are bound to crop up from time to time .
7 They ought to have been eliminated by now , or is there a mutation that continues to crop up from time to time ?
8 Bainbridge has a lovely village green which was the setting for nothing more remarkable than the fact that I arrived there one day to walk over from Bainbridge to Cam Houses with Tony and Eddie , the landlord from my local pub , only to discover that I 'd left my walking boots back at home in Dentdale and had to do the entire walk in a pair of fur-lined cowboy boots , which earned me the nickname of Roy Rogers for the rest of the week .
9 Price was working in Sheffield but was willing to help out from time to time .
10 Holograms are 3 dimensional images of scenes and events , enabling the viewer to look around from side to side , up and down to see different areas of the subject .
11 Surely it 's true that everyone who changes his or her life because of crime — from those afraid to go out at night to those afraid to go into the parks they pay for — surely these people have been denied a basic civil right .
12 Students in the USA had to go out on placement to firms for training , and thus had a good grounding in practical embalming .
13 I had planned to go back by bus to Fulham , as I still could not face the underground .
14 There is nothing wrong with such fear if it leads a Christian to cry out in weakness to God and exercise faith .
15 She did not really care whether people listened or not ; she was interested herself in what she was saying , and she was quite happy to potter about from bench to bench watching people writing their diaries when they should have been writing up their experiments .
16 ‘ I studied marketing in Singapore so as to branch out from accounting to marketing .
17 I had to get up at quarter to seven this morning .
18 seven quarter to eight , the week days when she needs to get up at quarter to seven
19 I have to get up at quarter to nine , how do you think I feel ?
20 They are all newly married , with small babies who are allowed to stay up to dinner to talk amusingly about sex .
21 The A.A. defences continued to take toll of attackers , 9/St.G 1 having a Ju87B so badly damaged over Valetta that the crew were forced to bale out on return to Sicily , while a second aircraft from this Staffel failed to return , Uffz .
22 More conservative writers see a tendency for power to diffuse out of government to interest group elites making policy in continuous negotiation with executive agencies , under the remit of wide ‘ enabling ’ legislation passed by the legislature and thereafter incapable of being controlled ( Lowi , 1969 ) .
23 The only cloud to appear on the horizon was Leopold 's unexpected illness , which obliged the family to move out of town to the peaceful , then almost rural atmosphere of Ebury Street in Pimlico .
24 ‘ It is safer for me to move around from place to place .
25 This may be an easy point to win , but it fails to answer the question : is it part of the legitimate exercise of freedom for the press to speak out in opposition to a popularly elected government operating in a situation of uncertain stability , with the ever-present threat of division and disunity ?
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