Example sentences of "he [verb] to the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Will the Minister widen his reply to include funding of the national companies , and in particular will he explain the remarks that he made to the Royal Society of Arts last week , when he speculated on the Government funding the national companies directly ?
2 Perhaps he ought to remember those days and get around to living up to the promise he made to the last Tory conference .
3 Mr Larkin is haunted by memories of a visit he made to the secluded woods at along with Marie Pettitt , Gary 's mother .
4 Perhaps the Home Secretary will get up to respond on the second point that he made to the Conservative party conference .
5 Thereafter Louis the German was the senior member of the family : some seventeen years older than his half-brother Charles , he lived to the ripe age of seventy .
6 When he succeeded to the English throne in 1272 Edward I was already in his thirties and a man of wide experience .
7 he turns to the warmer
8 As for application portability between the CMOS and RISC versions , he points to the Integrated Language Environment , ILE , that was released as part of OS/400 version 2 release 3 .
9 Rather he points to the theoretical paradox involved , namely that the human sciences ' very emphasis on historicity as a mode of being was equally applicable to themselves as forms of knowledge , and inevitably destroyed any attempt to formulate universal laws comparable to those of the natural sciences .
10 If he points to the empty box then it is probably fair to regard this as deliberate misinforming , as the ‘ implanting ’ of a false belief in another 's mind .
11 He points to the three British works in the recording project to demonstrate what variety it has to offer — the ‘ hard black-and-white ’ sound of the Birtwistle , the comparitively florid ‘ flute or clarinet-like writing ’ in the Maxwell Davies Concerto , the ‘ very expansive ’ trumpet part in the Blake Watkins , which is a ‘ wonderfully lyrical work without being sweet or silly in any way . ’
12 Will he convey to the Prime Minister what I know to be the view of the three party leaders who represent Northern Ireland in the House — that we are endeavouring diligently to meet the wishes that he expressed at the Downing street meeting on 11 February ?
13 He goes to the Chinese desk , and takes a sheet of paper out of the Mexican paper-rack .
14 the bell to get the bus to stop and he goes to the next flaming stop !
15 In ‘ At Tikhon 's ’ he goes to the holy man with a document which he gives him to read , and which he does read , and which Stavrogin next proposes to publish .
16 But he goes to the holy one 's mosque . ’
17 A young wife may assume that her husband will come shopping with her and he may take it for granted that she will stay at home while he goes to the local football match , or plays golf with the boys .
18 He belongs to the General Workers ' Union ( UGT ) , which has quarrelled with the Socialist Party .
19 He belongs to the New English Art Club .
20 He needs to know he belongs to the new family , that he is ‘ accepted in the beloved one ’ ( Eph. 1:6 ) .
21 We must remember Aldeborough when we read this rather odd poet , for he belongs to the grim little place , and through it to England .
22 Increasingly he resorted to the crudest measurements of progress and methods of achieving it .
23 He passes through it every time he rides to the old earth fort on the crest .
24 Subsequently , Gorbachev left Ryzhkov looking even more embattled when he announced to the Supreme Soviet that he personally preferred Shatalin 's programme .
25 So in July he announced to the American public : " we intend to honour our commitments " ( to West Germany and West Berlin ) and called for a build-up of American forces .
26 He led to the final 250 metres , before falling back to last .
27 MB 's is wearing clothes that do not fit in the first example eg. This time he refers to the good opinions that people have of him as new clothes and killing the king would be like throwing away hardly worn clothes .
28 He refers to the lithographed drawings as ‘ engravings ’ , and he used many short lines like an engraver scratching on copper ; pioneers are often conservative , and it was left to Edward Lear in his superb volume on parrots ( 1832 ) to exploit lithography , using bold flowing lines with his crayon on the stone .
29 Tillich recognizes the former point , when he refers to the mystical approach to nature , which is to be found in the works of St Francis of Assisi , Protestant mystics and German Romantics , and states that they illustrate an attitude almost indistinguishable from the principle of identity .
30 Recalling the emergence in the mid-1950s of the " New Movement " in educational administration in the United States and Canada , he refers to the intense romance with theory , " Sceptical practitioners were assured in the oft-quoted words of Dewey … that " theory is in the end the most practical of all things " .
  Next page