Example sentences of "through to [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ’ Like Muir , Eliot had won through to a vision of final acceptance , which allowed him to look back even to Sweeney and to call him , at Columbia in 1958 , ‘ friend ’ .
2 The scales across Fenna 's shoulders and haunches were as large as dinner plates , and thick , heavy and dry — they changed colour in different lights , from dull pewter through to a dark red , the colour of dried blood , or the murky green of the lower waters of the Amazon River .
3 The likelihood is that St Helens will have had their minds wonderfully concentrated by the experience and should win the replay at Wakefield Trinity tonight to go through to a meeting with Oldham in the quarter-finals on Sunday .
4 He wrote immediately to the SMG , cutting off all contact : ‘ I am not interested in agencies who politic and posture for no other reason than to promote themselves … secondly , as I am not presently able to place any trust in you , I must insist that any further matters you wish to raise are channelled through to a suitable agency , viz the local council or HCRC . ’
5 They stretch from aero-engines and power stations to the NBC national-television network to electric lighting to plastics to medical-diagnostic gadgets through to a huge near-bank , General Electric Financial Services .
6 The teams played four matches , spread over several weeks , against each of the others , with the top two then going through to a best-of-three final .
7 In order to win through to a match-racing play-off , he needed to finish among the top six nations at this regatta .
8 I can not imagine a more uplifting experience than listening through to a sequence of Brahms 's chamber compositions such as if offered here .
9 Finally , on the front panel , there 's the master volume knob and the controls for the onboard Alesis reverb/delay unit — a sixteen-notch rotary knob and a ‘ return ’ control for setting the required level of effect , from the tiniest hint of echo through to a nightmare in a bathtub .
10 This could range from a small lightweight kite to fly on a single line , through to a four-line aerobatic kite .
11 At the same time , the worker has at his command tools and machinery that would make him feel enormous strength but he feels impotent because he is involved in only one part of the pattern of mass production ; never experiencing involvement with a total process from the raw material stage through to a finished product .
12 Regrettably , the delays experienced in taking a matter through to a court hearing , together with the passing of information to other bodies , make it very difficult for outsiders to assess the effectiveness of s 447 enquiries .
13 I use a 300gsm Arches rough cotton watercolour paper , and brushes ranging from a no3 for detailed work through to a one inch for broad colour washes .
14 As usual we take the immediate point — Frodo and the others want to get out of the forest — while reading through to a kind of universality : the ‘ shadowed land ’ is life , life 's delusions of despair are the ‘ woods ’ , despair will end in some vision of cosmic order which can only be hinted at in stars or ‘ sun ’ .
15 Beardsley combined with former Liverpool team-mate Gary Ablett to put Everton through to a lucrative home tie against Chelsea in the last 16 of the Coca-Cola Cup .
16 How far such seismic social pressures come through to a child may be impossible to judge .
17 The expressions and ideas of religion — that of the Fatherhood of God , for instance — belong in the category of image , and it is the task of the philosopher to break through to a clearer conceptualisation , refining the images into concepts .
18 The movies had broken through to a vast new public and everything was on a different scale .
19 Benefits realised varied from site to site , but ranged from a doubling of throughput per week at a cost more than halved , through to a headcount reduction of one third .
20 It is inevitable , therefore , that problems in this respect will carry through to a tentative application of economics to law .
21 In many organisations you will be put through to a secretary whose job it is to filter calls .
22 Such conflicting views or theories of style will concern us for the remainder of this chapter , but rather than argue that one view is wholly superior to another , we shall try to harmonize the apparent conflicts , so that at the end of the chapter , we shall have worked through to a balanced view of what stylistics is about .
23 One of the rooms , the Osiris chapel , leads through to a further suite of rooms , dedicated to the Osirian cult .
24 This acting can range from pairs of students re-enacting a dialogue through to a simulation involving the whole class .
25 Successful schemes always had someone who could be identified as the driving force , someone who pushed and who steered the project through to a satisfactory launch .
26 At one extreme , there could be a continuous process in which a sort of chain reaction of biochemical processes in a particular ensemble of cells led inevitably from the early , vulnerable phase through to a final fixed form , like the hardening of glue or the developing of a photograph .
27 Knowing more about the voice also means realising that raising the voice and screeching on a higher pitch ( inevitable when excited ) is not the way to get through to a rebellious teenager who is deliberately testing your limits .
28 Two standard layouts re available : layout A incorporates a pair of very similar quarter cabins ; while layout B retains the quarter berth on the starboard side , with a head and shower compartment , with a door through to a capacious lazarette .
29 On the other hand , poorer residents , in spite of their organisation and activity , could often do very little to press their demands through to a successful policy outcome .
30 In a little while the waiter was back , bowing , smiling , leading them up two flights of steps then through to a table at the centre of the house .
  Next page