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

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1 ‘ This will make it quite comprehensive and right up to date , more up to date than the published version of the Official Journal , ’ he said .
2 If material 1 appeared in its condition 1 form in sequence 1 , then it appeared in its condition 2 form in sequence 2 , and so on to sequence 8 .
3 We have arrived at chapter 22 , but before we deal with it in detail , we must look quickly at another story that lies between Isaac 's birth and his coming so soon and so close to death .
4 You can now see why Christianity is so radical and so down to earth .
5 The list referred only briefly and somewhat obliquely to classroom practice , recommending ( but not defining ) : a stimulating and challenging learning environment ; flexible teaching strategies to meet the identified needs of individual pupils ; and specific practical help for individuals and small groups .
6 It is not unique to the industrial sector and not even to engineering ; it occurs in such widely differing activities as the construction of a longhut in a jungle clearing and the knitting of a pullover .
7 On the other hand , if this distinction is wrong , if faith depends on knowledge and knowledge depends on faith , then doubt would be a challenge to both knowledge and faith and not just to faith .
8 This is a much more difficult question to answer , because it involves applying the quantum principle to the structure of time and space themselves and not just to particle paths in a given space-time background .
9 The disease is closed-minded and not open to persuasion .
10 We whipped over the northernmost house , across the beach , and thus out to sea again .
11 And just back to football , the South Midland premier division ; Thame United retain their lead at the top of the table with a narrow but in the end , comfortable victory at Langford this afternoon .
12 Except it was different this time , Jessamy reminded herself as she pulled herself slowly and painfully back to reality .
13 Remember — always the entire sentence and always up to time .
14 As a result of a Request For Proposal process , IBM was asked to provide a more powerful and more up to date processor to replace one of the two existing IBM 3090–600J machines .
15 More regular and more up to date information is needed to take action .
16 And more up to date , there 's this nippy little number from Russia .
17 Descent : Routes on the left half of the cliff join a terrace which leads easily left to the broad descent rake known as Ledge Route ; those on the right lead to the top of the buttress and directly on to Ledge Route .
18 He had practically made up his mind that he would never go back — certainly not to Moyalla and probably not to teaching .
19 ‘ I ca n't not serve him , ’ she said as she moved around the counter and back on to home territory .
20 So this is the natural timescale on which to find biologically modulated climatic changes — and it is also the timescale typical of changes from Ice Age to interglacial and back again to Ice Age .
21 The only place I could think of was Stonehenge which must have been spanking new then and as up to date as a Hilton or an out-of-town Sainsburys .
22 According to Thomas Edwards [ q.v. ] , a friend despite their differences , he was consumptive and often close to death , and rarely able to preach .
23 We also carry a range of programs that teach you how to use your computer and even how to type .
24 Feeling rather uncomfortably damp and dirty , she set off again , turning off presently into a deep wood , through which a footpath led to the deer-park and then on to Granny Fordham 's cottage .
25 After , that was that , and then on to Road .
26 My first visit is to the Red Cross , to pick up medicines requested on the previous patrol and then on to visit the Franciscan nuns , who run a school in Nicosia .
27 And then on to father .
28 ‘ We 'll have one last gallop down to Lambs Dell and then up to home , what ? ’ he said , his pastoral vision of the Bagots already forgotten .
29 Depends what you mean by ‘ weather ’ , but yes , the countryside of Sussex is constantly suffering the attack of rain and the rain either has to soak into the ground where very often it erm dissolves material and eventually finds its way to rivers so that all rivers are carrying material from inland in solution out to the sea , or if erm you get very heavy rain , then the water actually runs off the surface of the ground , and as it runs off it will carry particulate material out into the rivers and then out to sea .
30 In Lancashire they soon changed from wool , to mixed wool and cotton , and then purely to cotton .
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