Example sentences of "this [verb] [prep] [noun sg] to " in BNC.
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1 | This amounted in effect to a grant of £1,000 a year , the annual amount of the lease which was now extinguished . |
2 | This led in turn to the most highly successful venture in buying and selling of business aircraft the aviation industry had seen . |
3 | This led in turn to larger and higher buildings , extended window and door space and a complexity of design for exterior and interior undreamed of in Romanesque architecture . |
4 | This led in turn to the creation of the Standing Committee on Employment , composed of representatives of the Commission , Council , employers and trade unions . |
5 | This applied in relation to all the foundation subjects in England , but only the core subjects in Wales . |
6 | The mean overall early mortality was point nine percent and the inter-site variation for this ranged from zero to three point eight percent . |
7 | A mean of two percent of patients were returned to theatre across the northern region after T U R P and this ranged from zero to seven point five percent . |
8 | A mean of two point four percent of patients received a blood transfusion of greater than two units across the region and again this ranged from zero to six point six percent across the region . |
9 | This stands in contrast to most consumer specialised magazine titles which have seen a fall in sales . |
10 | Recognising that this stands in contradiction to the statements contained in the terms and conditions of engagement which they offer their casual workers , some organisations seek to make it clear that they are no more than " collecting agents for the revenue " . |
11 | This , this happens from time to time does n't it ? |
12 | Where data do exist on support between kin across households , this tends in effect to be limited to documenting the networks through which support flowed and the kind of support which was given , and can give very little direct evidence about the underlying structure of social relations which supported these exchanges . |
13 | Since borrowers prefer to borrow long and lenders prefer to lend short , investors have to be compensated by a liquidity premium to forgo liquidity , and this increases with term to maturity . |
14 | This leads in turn to the third and deepest level of the motif , the mythical aspect . |
15 | This leads in turn to what is perhaps the fundamental difficulty in Hegel 's entire pattern of thought . |
16 | Lemert suggested that this cuts off access to conventional settings , activities and identities and in time leads to the ‘ deviants ’ acquiring a different conception of themselves : they live up to the deviant identity given to them by the labellers and indulge in more ( ‘ secondary ’ ) deviance . |
17 | Although people 's institutional knowledge of the comparative costliness of different types of credit is fairly accurate ( in terms , say , of knowing that banks are a cheaper source of loans than HP firms ) , they have little idea of the actual cost of credit , and of how this varies from type to type or firm to firm . |
18 | This varies from novel to novel ; but as a general guideline it is usually worth paying particular attention to the beginning and ending ( where structural aspects of the novel are often signalled most clearly ) . |
19 | The three main types of people who practise archaeology are professional archaeologists , amateur enthusiasts , and students , although this varies from country to country . |
20 | This varies from centre to centre but most specialise in landlord/ tenant , juvenile crimes and care cases , employment and welfare benefits . |
21 | Well this varies from individual to individual , but there are individuals who probably spend erm seventy per cent of their time on research , erm twenty per cent on teaching , and ten per cent on playing tennis . |
22 | This varies from material to material : a dye called phthalocyanine , dissolved in a polymer called PMMA , can store 1000 bits in its absorption band . |
23 | This varies from placement to placement . |
24 | This reduces in practice to deciding how to specify the destination of a jump instruction , when this destination may be any part-word or syllable . |
25 | This seems in principle to be an equally available justification as regards the mentally unfit , even though it may well be deplored . |
26 | This applies for example to the demand side , where the choice of functional forms is more than merely a matter of algebraic convenience ( see Dixit and Stiglitz , 1977 ) . |
27 | But of course this varied from place to place , from time to time , and it is still not clear how far working-class men and women did accept the domesticated role of married women , even in the diluted version which social circumstances could allow to become part of their lives . |
28 | In part this means in relation to other members of society as conditioned by the distribution of income and the operation of political power . |
29 | Tizard , for example , mentions the need to support the natural parents to enable them to care adequately ; Kellmer Pringle has advocated payment for mothers who stay at home to care ; and a further interviewee who may be identified with the ‘ society-as-parent ’ view had this to say in answer to the argument that the 1975 Act put already powerless parents in an even more powerless position : |