Example sentences of "to move [adv] to " in BNC.

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1 A final comment , to move right to the other end of the production process .
2 To move successfully to a market society the Soviet Union will need to draw on latent entrepreneurial values among its citizens .
3 It sounded an ideal way to explore some of the remoter parts of this region , but our time was limited and we wanted to move on to the higher mountains .
4 Aware of the strength of public feeling , the council , which is trying to promote York to southern companies as a relocation area , put up restrictive height barriers at some of its open car parks forcing the travellers to move on to council land elsewhere .
5 Mention of ‘ the dark gods of Mexico ’ signals that we are about to move on to the writer for whom his strongest opprobrium is reserved .
6 But I now felt the time was coming to move on to another department .
7 Where politicians have challenged him , he has outmanoeuvred them until such time as he perceived his work to be done ; and then — Vienna 1964 , Berlin 1989 — he simply and quickly stepped aside to move on to fresh projects .
8 A Lewis grandmother was moved between her daughters ‘ as the family arrive ’ — she had to move on to make room for infant children .
9 It is now time to move on to new pastures .
10 By now you will have stimulated the circulation enough to move on to the next stage , which is kneading .
11 Then she was able to move on to paying all those bills that had accumulated .
12 When the more straightforward side of the questioning has been dealt with it is usual for the interviewer to move on to more difficult areas of assessment — motivation , enthusiasm , ability to fit in with existing staff , flexibility , readiness to travel if necessary , stability of home background , etc .
13 James settled briefly in the papal city of Avignon before , as a result of British government pressure , he was obliged to move on to Italy .
14 My objective is to move on to fresh ground and not have to return to this particular patch .
15 These fry are ready to move on to a larger tank .
16 This one year course anticipates approval to HNC standard with the potential to move on to HND and Degree Courses in Textile Design .
17 Once the first Gazette was completed they decided to move on to something else .
18 I believe I told you that we are to move on to the Astors ? ’
19 As one woman in a discussion group saw it : it really is a good thing that there is labour turnover and it is possible to move on to other factories because women do get bored .
20 HAVING by now produced one or two very presentable videos by the direct method of editing in camera , you may be ready to move on to carrying out some post-production editing as a way of overcoming the limitations of in-camera editing and further improving the standard of your work .
21 It becomes important for the counsellor to move on to the main reasons for the meeting , and to begin the process as openly and honestly as possible .
22 They must naturally be pursued , but always giving counsellees the opportunity to move on to other , more crucial issues .
23 Through asking closed questions requiring ‘ yes ’ , ‘ no ’ or one-word answers , and by stipulating ‘ I 'd like to move on to
24 Once you have become accustomed to selecting the needles , sliding the lace carriage and moving the main carriage in the correct order , you will be able to move on to rather more elaborate lace patterns .
25 ‘ Who knows , Diana may well want to move on to bigger and faster racing cars as she gets better and more confident . ’
26 And it is becoming increasingly likely that the England starlet will be allowed to move on to another county where he can make a fresh start .
27 I am happy here for the time being but want the chance to move on to bigger things in the future . ’
28 Once I 'd accomplished the first stages of training , getting her to sit still on my fist , I had to move on to the next stage : getting her to feed there .
29 After the biplane era , Spencer Flack 's ‘ toy department ’ was now ready to move on to serious play .
30 Accordingly it is interesting to speculate to what extent these attitudes have caused British businessmen to adopt short time-horizons in making decisions — with negative consequences for longer-term growth performance — because their main objective is to acquire sufficient wealth to enable them to move on to the better things in life .
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