Example sentences of "from [noun] to [noun] [coord] " in BNC.

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1 As the months passed and the court moved — and Anne and Joan with it — from Westminster to Greenwich , from Greenwich to Sheen and then back again to Westminster , and as Joan practised and adopted the ways of the nobility , the close resemblance between herself and Anne became more pronounced .
2 Transitions from g to g and from u to u states are forbidden ; only transitions from u to g or from g to u states are allowed .
3 So there are two records being achieved here with the operation of ‘ The Sarum ’ being hauled from Waterloo to Salisbury and back on Friday , February 5th .
4 It was impossible to commute from Rummidge to Ipswich or vice versa .
5 Why not make a visit to the International Motor Show , the British International Antiques Fair , or any of the numerous public exhibitions covering everything from photography to holidays and travel , and classic cars to boats and caravans .
6 Boxborough , Massachusetts-based NEC Technologies Inc has introduced its UltraLite Versa Series , the first portable modular notebook that enables users to choose and change configurations as needed : prices go from $2,660 to $4,540 and users can change and upgrade components as needed — between pen and keyboard , for instance , with no tools .
7 Cruise from Nice to Venice or from Venice to Egypt and the Holy Land , via Dubrovnik and the Greek Islands .
8 By the eighth century the eastward drift of shingle along the coast had given natural protection to the spread of the salt marsh , and during the 12th and 13th centuries Pevensey Levels gradually changed from saltmarsh to reed and sedge meadows and ultimately pasture .
9 Transitions from g to g and from u to u states are forbidden ; only transitions from u to g or from g to u states are allowed .
10 After the cruise , you will fly from Aswan to Cairo and overnight at the Cairo Marriott , flying back to London the following day .
11 Overall , in the 1970s the main areas of rapid population growth tended to lie just beyond the traditional suburban counties : in southern England as a broad arc to the north of the Home Counties from Norfolk to Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire .
12 In Africa , it is argued that man was using fire at least 50–55 000 years ago , taking coals from camp to camp and using the fire to smoke out bees from their nests in honey-hunting , or driving game .
13 And improvement in the working conditions of pregnant women , such as exclusion from exposure to vibration and radiation , for example , would improve both maternal and fetal health .
14 With a flattering scoop neckline and tucked short sleeves , it fastens at the front with 10 small buttons from neckline to hem and has a softly swirling eight-panel skirt .
15 Traditional models consist of the transfer of information from one person to another , for example , from user to designer and from manager to designer .
16 In this chapter , the primary concern is with changes occurring over time spans from minutes to centuries and from spatial wavelengths from about 1 m to about 100 km .
17 But he also disclosed that the 11 BR employees singled out for specific criticism by the Hidden inquiry would face disciplinary action , ranging from reprimand to suspension or dismissal .
18 He moves the court from Agra to Delhi and builds the Red Fort in the centre of the new Shahjehanabad .
19 To do this , measure the distance from toe to toe or heel to heel when you take a normal stride .
20 Situated on a busy road , just 10–15 minutes walk uphill from the centre of town , the hotel 's excellent facilities include a top-floor swimming pool with dazzling panoramic views of the resort 's breathtaking bay , a roof-top restaurant called ‘ La Tenda ’ where light lunches are available from mid-June to September and a solarium equipped with relaxing sun-beds .
21 InterCity had to solve the problem of getting its passengers from Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury and chose to do so by hiring a bus rather than paying another railway sector to do the job .
22 As always with matters of team work , the basic environmental factors differed from case to case and complicated any analysis of what constitutes a ‘ team ’ ( Marshall , et al . ,
23 The latter pointed out that , while there was a general process of restructuring , the way it worked out in practice was different from case to case and that therefore it was pointless to search for highly regular patterns .
24 The way in which such imputed values are found varies from case to case and is seldom straightforward .
25 Examination methods and timetables naturally differ from course to course but , in general , candidates are assessed both on written examinations and on course work during the year .
26 Increased market share as new annual premiums rose from $39m to $45.8m and single premiums from $126m to $241.6m .
27 Distance from withers to elbow and elbow to ground is equal .
28 Thus the Long Gilt suffered a mild setback in 1988 and 1989 as the public sector finances moved from deficit to surplus and the Treasury instituted a " buy-back " programme for long-dated gilts .
29 And on several nights Madame , looking from O to Boy and from Boy to O , noticed , as several of us had , their remarkable similarity of colouring .
30 On that holiday they er they 'd also been to Cairo as well as , and I mean some of the erm trips erm are they go to Luxor and you board a erm er the ship from Luxor to Aswan and you do n't get to Cairo and I think if you 're going to Egypt you really want to go to Cairo
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