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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As now , the decision who will proceed to A level , and thence to higher education will in effect have been taken at the end of the third year .
2 By nature I mean , first , the principle of survival which drives us to continue living and necessarily entails the ingestion of food ; and , second , the principle of growth which transforms us from childhood to maturity and thence to old age .
3 I climbed through the Megger Stones and on to Great Coum looking down Dentdale and Deepdale .
4 His passengers were all shaken and some were thrown from their seats and on to each other . ’
5 Not only is there a great depth to the pressure for change , but it also exists on an enormously wide number of fronts — from the National Curriculum through assessment and on to open enrolment and the local management of schools and ( for some ) beyond that to grant maintained status or other ‘ exotics ’ .
6 That means that if they only take the score card then you 're in there fairly quickly do the advertising sales and come out and on to another site .
7 The fact that the duty of care is enforced at all means of course that there is a possibility that decisions with bad outcomes will attract liability , and so to that extent procedural standards might suppress risk .
8 And so to next month 's final article when I shall report on the outcome of the trip to Gresford and give a full report on the practical side of the GPS navigating system .
9 The scale of development that 's in Professor Lock 's contemplation is plainly not one that I I think that would directly er affect Richmondshire and so to some extent er I 'm speaking from that perspective .
10 It helped to maintain levels of production and to prevent price-cutting wars which led to further bankruptcies and so to further unemployment .
11 War is financed by industry , and the power in any land , behind any throne , behind Hitler or behind our own democracy , is a body of immensely wealthy men whose allegiance is ultimately to their wealth , and perhaps to each other .
12 Tallymen and check traders , and perhaps to some extent local moneylenders ( sometimes in practice the same individuals ) , exercise — on a very much smaller scale — an influence opposite to the one which will be described below under ‘ Banks ’ .
13 The fact remains that men 's leisure-time activities are much more visible to history , more organized and perhaps to some extent seen as more legitimate .
14 Er on the envi environmental aspect , I think it 's worth emphasizing because clearly this is the major concern of both Scotton and er the Residents ' Association and er that the County Council has and perhaps to some extent I think it 's certainly the public consultations or the exercises I 've been involved in at this stage in a major scheme has done far more work in trying to assess those effects than is normally the case at this stage in a ma major highway scheme .
15 Forward and down to either side , the maximum clear viewing area is available outlined with the cream of the 207 's primary colour .
16 out and down to another room .
17 The marriage ceremony involves a couple in a public contract — a legal commitment to each other and only to each other , bigamy being a punishable crime .
18 They were not , by modern standards , especially radical in tone ; but they introduced to a wider public the new approaches to the critical study of the Bible which up till then had developed more on the Continent , and only to some extent in the cloistered world of the English universities .
19 We argued for much greater prominence to be given to the potential of genuine pupil-pupil collaboration , and less to low-level writing , reading and drawing tasks .
20 Although the drift of coarse material on the upper part of the beach must be due to wave action and not to current action , the role of currents in moving material over the sea floor is disputed .
21 Almost two years of acrimonious disputes between the Indian Government and the European aircraft manufacturer Airbus Industrie came to an end on Jan. 11 , when a court of inquiry in New Delhi ruled that the crash of an Indian Airlines A-320 Airbus in February 1990 , in which 92 people had died , had been due to pilot error , and not to technical failure , as the Indian authorities had maintained [ see p. 37268 ] .
22 And not to that kind of limp posture that was summed up by the princ principal of the theological college er with the word inertia .
23 Although some Scottish lakes had begun to show signs of recovery , this was due to the decline of energy-intensive industries such as iron and steel and not to environmental protection policies .
24 did not ‘ think it is open to this court to hold that the rule applies only to damage to adjoining land or to a proprietary interest in land and not to personal injury . ’
25 Their leader Lord Lovat thought their safe return was due to ‘ the opposition being half-hearted or badly trained ’ and not to any skill on the raiders ' part .
26 Such a task for sociology may appear reasonable and innocuous , particularly in societies which embrace a commitment to the principle of using knowledge for practical purposes and not to any principle of knowledge for knowledge 's sake' .
27 The Home Office agreed , attributing the upsurge to the ‘ general fear of war that exists in the lower middle and working classes , and not to any tenderness for Russia . ’
28 It has been shown ( see introduction ) that chronic smoking leads to a chronically raised gastric secretory capacity in both control and duodenal ulcer subjects , and that the secretory capacity of an individual is related solely to the size of his parietal cell mass , and not to any change in the sensitivity of those cells ; this also appears to be the case in smokers .
29 I 'm aware of the accounts they 've handled successfully and also the fact that , owing to the recent recession and not to any fault of their own , they 've been seriously affected by the cut-back in promotion budgets of several of their larger clients . ’
30 Note that this only applies to ordinary armour and not to magic armour which saves normally .
  Next page