Example sentences of "to for the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Yes that 's what he told me , he said we were going on to for the rest of the week , eleven hours and then start double shifting Monday .
2 How much trouble are we prepared to go to for the privilege of sharing our lives with feline companions ?
3 The feedback we get is that we 're the ones from Manchester that people look to for the music .
4 It is not a place you can just go to for the day and therefore you need to spend at least a couple of days getting there overnight , coming back again and er , for a family of four I calculate that even taking one 's own car across the Channel , the average cost for a family of four , is of the order of five or six hundred pounds .
5 And he went on just across the road to Road Co-op and he bought a small loaf of bread which at that time would be about tuppence , and gave the old lady this small loaf about ten days afterwards he called again , he said , he said I 've come to see you again , now are you alright and so on , he said I 've done a foolish thing this morning , he said I 'm responsible for the flowers , altar flowers , he said and I 've left my wallet at my lodgings , and my landlady has gone down to for the day .
6 I mean t to for the cooking that they did for a pub it was and we had duckling and salmon , poached
7 This implies of course that the infinitive event 's realization by the subject has to constitute sufficiently significant information about the referent which the latter refers to for the sentence to be worth uttering .
8 I 'm tempted to go but I do n't want to for the fool I 'll make out of myself .
9 I remember er a flock staying here and the shepherds got their supper here and then they went on to for the night .
10 The distance of the Virgo cluster is approximately 15 Mpc , and so the signal is reduced to for the conversion of a mass of to gravitational radiation .
11 Lot nineteen sixty one , an option to purchase your honour for three hundred and eighty five which at that time was at a rate of nine hundred pounds a year and they went to this friend of the firm of solicitors and there of the document which doubly signed and was dated March twenty four nineteen sixty one but my consideration one pounds penny by thereby granted to for the purchasing of .
12 Importunity or threats , such as the testator has not the courage to resist , moral command asserted and yielded to for the sake of peace and quiet , or of escaping from distress of mind or social discomfort , these , if carried to a degree in which the free play of the testator 's judgment , discretion or wishes , is overborne , will constitute undue influence , though no force is either used or threatened .
13 One most destructive mode by which vast numbers are destroyed is that of chasing the birds in a boat at the time they shed their primary quill-feathers , when being unable to fly they are soon rowed down and captured ; this practice , which is to be much regretted , is usually resorted to for the sake of the beautiful down with which the breasts are clothed , but not unfrequently is mere wantonness .
14 The CA 1985 should be referred to for the detail .
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