Example sentences of "[to-vb] through to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Only the leading two candidates are entitled to go through to the second round . |
2 | In addition , the 16 teams to go through to the third round will each receive an illustrated copy of The Guinness Book of Cricket Facts and Feats . |
3 | He only needed to make third to go through to the next round . |
4 | He now looks a good bet to go through to the next stage of the competition tomorrow . |
5 | In the Junior Singles final John Nolan of Blackrock looked almost certain to go through to the British Isles Championship when he led Belmont 's Paul Daly 20-11 . |
6 | The first filter sends a signal to the second filter telling it how much to allow to go through to the outgoing side of our personality . |
7 | He thinks that the likeliest area of ACT reform is the provision of a friendly UK base to act as a holding company for the European operations of UK or Japanese companies , allowing profits to flow through to the ultimate parent without the imposition of an ACT barrier . |
8 | Each part of the company has been asked to look for ways of doing more , with less , and the performance improvements now happening all over the company are starting to feed through to the bottom line . |
9 | In order to win through to a match-racing play-off , he needed to finish among the top six nations at this regatta . |
10 | Tierrie Molignengo , who is 23 , works at the 15 North Parade restaurant , and he hopes he 's going to win through to the National Finals which take place in April , with his menu for four , which has by the rules of the game , to cost less than £35 . |
11 | They fear that they are now looking at a successor tax which is designed simply to allow the Government to muddle through to the next election . |
12 | In Chapters 5 and 6 we counted only those paths which spanned the entire utterance , anchoring the beginning of the search at the left-hand end and ignoring all paths that failed to match through to the right-hand end . |
13 | It took a moment for the full enormity of what was happening to filter through to the brandy-drenched consciousness of the member reading The Times . |
14 | The only mediaeval institutions to survive through to the present day are of course the older Universities . |
15 | Then the only jump instruction that is logically necessary ( though others may be provided for efficiency ) is one to jump if the condition code is set to a specified binary bit pattern ( or perhaps a specified group of patterns ) , and to drop through to the next instruction if the condition code is set to any other pattern . |
16 | 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 . |
17 | erm The only way to get through to a diverted phone is to call it through the number it 's diverted to . |
18 | Okay , yes , and the only way to get through to a diverted number is to call the number it 's diverted to . |
19 | Only two candidates ( Dominique Voynet in the Jura and Christine Barthet in Haut-Rhin ) managed to get through to the second round on March 28 but neither was then elected . |
20 | ‘ I am trying to get through to the Islamic Foundation , ’ went on Ali , ‘ to warn them of what is going on here . |
21 | It 's much easier to get through to the other side of the world than to the other side of London , and the lines are much clearer too . |
22 | In the men 's singles contest , managed to get through to the semi final while in the triples contest , and from Draught Stout joined from Brewing to win through as far as the semi finals . |
23 | ‘ Hello , operator , I 'm trying to get through to the Kosher butcher — it 's on the blink and I 've people coming for dinner Friday — Oh , thank you , dear . |
24 | If allowed to get through to the biological medium , dirt particles could clog it up , and possibly smother the bacterial colony . |
25 | 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 . |
26 | Common themes included concern at failure to think through to an underlying purpose — the absence of any rationale . |