Example sentences of "to [art] [det] [noun pl] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Inge was not himself a party to the latter proceedings and the verdict came only after his dismissal from the chief justiceship ( in June 1317 ) but it seems probable that the dismissal was connected with these charges .
2 Once the scheme is launched it may be too late to save it from failure if you have no readily available answers to the many questions that employees will certainly raise .
3 The list is presented mainly to alert the design team to the many dimensions that it is possible to work in .
4 Now , with the Chatterbox Activity Resource Pack , you can add to the many games and activities in Chatterbox 1 and 2 .
5 The need to build hypotheses into pattern-recognizing programs can best be illustrated by referring to the many programs that have been written to interpret line diagrams ( see Figure 12 ) .
6 The energy management assistance scheme , which will come into place on 1 April , will grant-aid energy efficiency projects for smaller businesses — a new initiative to add to the many others that my Department already runs .
7 It is an insult to the many managers and workers who responded so well for the hon. Gentleman to imply that they were less than efficient and hard working in those difficult circumstances .
8 In a number of ways , the police are making positive responses to suggestions of working together to tackle problem areas and undertake inter-agency approaches to the many problems that need a co-operative approach .
9 In his reference to the poll tax , the hon. Member for Teignbridge referred to the many things that had to be built on to it and the many anomalies that had to be addressed .
10 Alexander firmly believed that man has to delay his instantaneous response to the many stimuli that he is bombarded with each day if he is ever to cope with his rapidly changing environment .
11 At night , after dinner , it is very pleasant to stroll from hotel to hotel or to the many bars and small restaurants or , later , to the discothèques .
12 In Committee we shall draw attention to the many anomalies that are already beginning to pile up .
13 Close to the many restaurants and bars in the area , this hotel offers good facilities and excellent value for money .
14 There was something exciting about the ruggedness of the coastline which offered such a sharp contrast to the many flowers and exotic plant life of the island .
15 Firstly , the loss of this source of revenue is a major blow to the many individuals and groups working to improve the quality of life in urban priority areas .
16 THE WELSH used to be a hindrance rather than a help to the All Blacks but , by giving Grant Fox permission to practise his goalkicking at the Arms Park prior to tomorrow 's game with Cardiff , they might be contributing to their own downfall .
17 And this is why , in spite of the years of ostracism , it was possible for the Springboks to lose by only three points to the All Blacks and 23 points to the Wallabies .
18 The score is 25 Tests to the All Blacks and only five to British sides in rugby history .
19 The score is 25 Tests to the All Blacks and only five to British sides in rugby history .
20 Many of Innocent 's pronouncements on written record , on the appeal procedure ( the case to be returned to the former judges if the objection proved unreasonable and the appellant to be condemned to pay the costs ) , and on intermediary judgments jostled with other decisions among the decrees of the Lateran Council .
21 Otherwise , such business will remain subject to the Own Funds and Solvency Ratio Directives .
22 The report noted that advocates of re-introduction did not wish simply to limit the penalty to the same offences as those to which it had applied between 1861 and 1948 .
23 ‘ Far from pretending that wives are in general no better treated than slaves … no slave is a slave to the same lengths and in so full a sense of the word as a wife is [ for her husband ] can claim from her and enforce the lowest degradation of a human being , that of being made the instrument of an animal function contrary to her inclinations . ’
24 They 're part of the changing retail scene which ranges from the modern shopping centres at one end of the spectrum to squat shops , short term let shops and car boot sales at the other , for the other less source of er retailing , source of purchasing from a decreasing number of people erm trade in car boot sales are subject to the same controls as high street traders basically be product safety , erm , but as well as those problems we are increasingly coming across other problems in particularly counterfeit goods , goods like that on sale at car boot sales , quite attractive , wholly illegal and it wo n't be out for about six or nine months yet .
25 In it Taylor defends ideas that Mill himself found too radical ; primarily , that women should have access to the same professions as men , and that they should not be forced to inhabit ‘ separate spheres ’ .
26 The vertical ramp will be made to the same dimensions as Southsea 's , as long as they can come up with the money to make it .
27 Reports from such experts are subject to the same rules and privileges as medical reports but would be classed as non-medical experts so that directions will have to be sought in any type of personal injury case if a party wants to call more than one ( see RSC Ord 25 , r8 below ) .
28 Formerly the domicile of a wife was necessarily the same as that of her husband , but under the Domicile and Matrimonial Proceedings Act 1973 the wife 's dependent domicile was abolished : now her domicile is determined according to the same rules as for a single person .
29 The role of the officers — the vanguard of revolutionary education , exempt from the civilian controls which applied to electricity or water — seemed to have encouraged them in their belief that in their private capacities too officers were not subject to the same rules as civilians .
30 We should have provision for granting supervised access to the same resources as staff .
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