Example sentences of "[to-vb] to [noun] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Moreover , the lack of precision and the subtlety of the overall vision of the city development strategy , as Holford outlined , was not all that easy to articulate either , or to communicate to others with conviction ( Cherry and Penny , 1986 ) . |
2 | Without the republicans the Labour left would have remained abstract propagandists ; without the Labour left , the republicans would have been less able to communicate to people in Derry and beyond . |
3 | The charity is to write to doctors at North Tees , South Cleveland , Darlington Memorial , Hartlepool and Bishop Auckland General Hospitals asking what they want . |
4 | SOME of you may remember me appealing for help to form a national organisation to write to prisoners on death row in the Caribbean . |
5 | It 's this ‘ woman as victim ’ angle that particularly bothers other female musicians , especially Miki Berenyi , who was moved to write to Angst after Steven Wells ' Daisy Chainsaw interview ( wrongly ) alluded to Katie Jane Garside having been mentally and sexually abused as a child . |
6 | The consuming element in Lloyd Webber 's rapture was apparently her ability to soar to F above top C , play Rachmaninov on the piano , and sing in Russian at the same time . |
7 | The students are the first to come to Bradford as part of exchange agreements with the University of Carleton , Ottowa and Carnegie-Mellon University Pittsburg . |
8 | While the children each paid 25p to come to school in clothes of their own choice , the staff dressed up St. Trinians style in uniform . |
9 | It is possible to make some observations of the law relating to obscenity and indecency which indicate that , while accepting that one ought to be guided by the rule of law in censorship matters , one would be better advised to come to decisions without reference to this or that piece of obscenity or indecency legislation . |
10 | The appointment was made amid controversy over Vistbacka 's comment that Finland accepted too many refugees and that only women should be allowed to come to Finland as refugees " to be wives for unmarried Finnish farmers " . |
11 | But I believe that what you should do with trying to come to estimates of housing provision , is to put together the best technical assumptions that you can , to then sit down and take a long hard look at the figures based on the erm the policies of the County Council as approved by the Secretary of State in previous structure plan approvals , the current government policy . |
12 | Bland was encouraged to come to Europe by Gary Player . |
13 | One reason for that is that most of the thousands of people who travel on those wretched trains to come to London to work are either unskilled or semi-skilled , to use the terms of the manufacturing industry . |
14 | Rance 's proposal to ask an AFPFL delegation to come to London for discussions was accepted , and Attlee informed parliament that they would ‘ hasten forward the time when Burma shall realise her independence ’ . |
15 | AUSTRALIAN lock forward TROY COKER faces a very difficult dilemma : whether to come to London for Harlequins ’ Pilkington Cup final on 2nd May or whether to play for his province Queensland against Auckland in the Super Six competition . |
16 | She had to come to London from Aberdeen with her husband Alexander , a doctor turned printer . |
17 | Would you like to come to church with Papa and me ? ’ |
18 | A Peruvian man with drug-resistant tuberculosis was advised to come to Britain for treatment , but warned not to bring any medication in case he was stopped at immigration . |
19 | Since there are plans for Tyson to come to Britain in July , Bruno could have a busy spring in the ring after he finishes on the boards in February . |
20 | At the end of April 1916 , he is reputed to have expressed to General Gallwitz his readiness to come to terms with France , and even to hand back Metz . |
21 | 3 ) ‘ When the babies are very young leave them to come to terms with others at their own pace . ’ |
22 | They have had to come to terms with computer print-outs , data sheets , the use of electronic equipment , and biological sampling techniques . |
23 | It could be a rewarding form of teaching to help an uninformed but well-motivated student to come to terms with poetry , but it would involve time and leisure . |
24 | It 's taken you too long to come to terms with Mark 's death — Anne told me a little of how it 's been with you , the way you 've fought the grief and sorrow . ’ |
25 | After consulting this same healer on several further occasions , Simone decided to join a small team of people specialising in past-life therapy , and now helps others to come to terms with traumas in the past which are blocking present progress or happiness . |
26 | While orthodox Marxist — Leninism of the Comintern period offered no serious accounts of liberal democratic practices and institutions , neo-Marxists have tried to come to terms with phenomena which classical Marxists did not anticipate , especially the advent of some form of mixed economy and the growth of an extended welfare state in every advanced capitalist society . |
27 | The vehemence and the unanimity with which this judgment has now been condemned indicates , for the first time , a wish in this country to come to terms with Vichy . |
28 | It was originally designed by space scientists in America to help astronauts to come to terms with weightlessness . |
29 | The task was not simply to come to terms with Wagner 's music drama , but to reconcile his theory of it with his actual practice . |
30 | Derek Jeffries was bought for Crystal Palace for £100,000 in September 1973 by Manager Malcolm Allison , who h , ad also been his boss at Manchester City , to help boost Palace 's struggling midfield as we sought desperately to come to terms with life after relegation to Division Two . |