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

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1 To wit , the kind of speed on to man and ball and to the breakdown which would in itself render it a great deal more difficult for the All Blacks to make the Lions ' pack look heavy-footed to the point of statuesque .
2 In the last five partial responders prolongation of therapy up to week 38 led to a definite response and HBsAg seroconversion in three of the five patients .
3 Were the records of work up to date ?
4 More importantly John Sadler is credited with inventing a method of transfer-printing on to earthenware tiles .
5 The most obvious test of television 's ability to set the public agenda was provided by its massive shift of emphasis on to defence in the third week of the campaign .
6 Television 's enormous shift of emphasis on to defence issues in the third week of the campaign correlated with a huge rise in the number of voters who saw defence as the Conservative Party 's main campaign theme , but with only a modest rise in the number of who wanted a defence debate .
7 Often this has been done deliberately : factories and sewage works are built to discharge into seas and rivers , and ‘ honey barges ’ ferry cargoes of sewage out to sea .
8 It is well established that tension and stress can cause a variety of physical problems , ranging from attacks of influenza through to heart attacks , strokes and even cancer .
9 They are thus forced to extend the area of cultivation on to land hitherto used by pastoralists for seasonal grazing .
10 All versions of Okapi up to Okapi '87 were written in Z80 assembly language and operated on a network of Apple IIe microcomputers connected to a Nestar PLAN/4000 file server .
11 The sun was shining but there was a bank of cloud out to sea ; no discernible movement anywhere .
12 Having been satisfied with the tool 's performance on the rafters , we used it to tack down sheets of fibreboard on to chipboard .
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