Example sentences of "how [art] [noun sg] [vb -s] to " in BNC.

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1 Another potential problem for Marlow is how the public reacts to the idea of Quorn .
2 How the bureaucracy relates to the ruling class is more than a matter of origins .
3 In step three , the facilitator asks people to personalize the trigger , to see how the problem relates to Our lives .
4 Yet this is precisely how the problem tends to be approached by official bodies .
5 God knows how the treasury comes to be so desperate poor .
6 It is in this layer that historians will discover answers to their key questions : how the firm responds to opportunities and threats ; how it interacts with government , other firms , its employees , and its customers ; how it establishes R&D programs and marketing strategies ; and so on .
7 The individual 's interpretation of a situation is based on personal beliefs about communication competence — one 's own and the other person 's — and these beliefs affect how the individual relates to others , and how others relate to the individual .
8 So after ten years of telling us how the future belongs to Thatcher , he will spend the next five telling us how successful Major will be in creating a classless society .
9 I asked him to explain how the Area relates to the rest of the University .
10 In this chapter , we examine the factors which influence the demand for money and the important question of how the economy reacts to changes in the supply of money .
11 At the John Radcliffe Hospital , Professor Andrew McMichael 's looking at how the body responds to the virus .
12 So our care and management of the young horse will affect not only how the horse relates to people , but whether the horse relates to its environment in a way that is constructive or destructive to the horse itself .
13 How the glass seems to be bringing together so many of my old themes , he wrote .
14 This letter written to the Daily Jang , an established Urdu newspaper printed in Britain , shows how the family responds to a man 's promiscuity .
15 Physics is interested only in those abstracted features of the world which its theories specify : one way of describing what physics does is " go beneath " how the world appears to us to uncover the " real " physical principles and processes which produce the ordered universe .
16 This is not simply to force people into speaking blank verse , but to see how a person responds to the essential humanity of a character — for Shakespeare , of all the classical writers , is probably the most human , whose work is blessed with both grandeur and the common touch .
17 ‘ Now it 's your turn , ’ he said , ‘ although I suspect I know how a woman gets to be an international model .
18 It says erm The theme is an urgently felt personal one , an exploration of how a woman comes to maturity in the world of the writer 's youth .
19 I wish I could give these women their time again , to take them to the hills and show them what they could have shared with their selfish husbands , show them how a ridge-walk compares to a coffee morning in a draughty church hall , and how they could have become more in tune with their spirit and feelings up here than stuck down there watching television soap operas .
20 It must have looked very bad , but I 'm afraid one does n't always stop to think how a situation appears to an outsider . ’
21 The analytical core which Keynes shared with Pigou did not extend to their respective prognoses of how an economy responds to excess supply in the labour market .
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