Example sentences of "and [to-vb] [adv] to " in BNC.
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1 | We have been asked to give that up and to go over to the European Community system , with the European Court and majority voting — the shoe is pinching all the time . |
2 | All I want is silence , and to go back to my father 's house . ’ |
3 | In order to fit and to go back to work on Monday morning . |
4 | Now , this is not an Oxford cartoon either , but it 's a looting soldier , and very much , I think , underlines what people felt about soldiers around the place , and to go back to the overcrowding , erm the great problem was that constantly not only soldiers , but a great many other people , court officials , court servants , barbers , whoever , erm all had to found accommodation , and because St Aldate 's was so near the court , a great many of them were of course connected with the court , they had some high ranking ones . |
5 | He saw his election as a mandate to move Civic Forum to the right of the political spectrum and to proceed rapidly to a market economy . |
6 | The severe budget deficit caused the UNHCR to close 19 of its approximately 100 regional offices and to freeze up to 300 posts . |
7 | They need to be tough minded as well as lovingly tender and to know when to ‘ change gear ’ from one to the other . |
8 | The exercise of accountability , and of professional judgement , by their very definitions require much more in-depth knowledge , and the ability to analyse and evaluate information , and to relate both to the care of individuals and to client groups . |
9 | Another reason for its failure was that CAFFE could only ever provide a single path through the diagnostic tree ; there was no way to volunteer information and to jump ahead to a later section of the flow chart . |
10 | And Lenin , who had talked only at party meetings , before audiences of Marxist students , who had hardly appeared in public in 1905 , now spoke to them with a voice of authority that was to pick up all their undirected energy , to command their uncertain confidence , and to swell suddenly to a world-wide resonance . |
11 | Flu can spread very rapidly , so it is easy to catch and to pass on to others . |
12 | Flu can spread very rapidly , so it is easy to catch and to pass on to others . |
13 | I needed more er information on both of those persons , David and Lawrence er and I asked Inspector er to make enquiries regarding those persons and to come back to me with that information . |
14 | If this is the case it might be much more effective to scrap the mailing and to talk personally to the journalists concerned . |
15 | It also wants the IFC to be less transaction-hungry and to talk more to governments about policy . |
16 | Members of the British Agrochemicals Association ( BAA ) are required to supply only pesticides cleared under the scheme and to sell only to distributors who have agreed to supply those cleared products . |
17 | Mr Crump was alarmed ; Mrs Crump leaned forward on her toes to increase her disappointing height and to reach forward to this man whose every title and reference made him more and more desirable . |
18 | 16.17 At level 3 there are statements of attainment that refer to the ability to read silently with sustained concentration , and to listen attentively to stories read aloud . |
19 | As we arrive at the end of the year it is , perhaps , a time to look back at what has been achieved and to look forward to what lies ahead . |
20 | To reflect on that match and to look forward to the Oxfordshire Cup Final between Henley and Oxford , Adam Hollingworth is joined by Ray Tapper , the Oxford coach , and Nigel Dudding , the Henley club captain . |
21 | It caused him to question both , and to look back to nature for inspiration : ‘ yet nature is invariable ’ he said . |
22 | Of course , to court imprisonment , and to submit voluntarily to the penalties imposed by the state could be construed as in implicit recognition of the right of the state to impose those penalties and , therefore , to play into the hands of an unjust regime . |
23 | And to point out to her now that she did n't know the right thing to do when visiting people like the Kirkleys would be , in a way , against the advice she had just given her , although it was n't to do with talking ; more like behaviour and deportment or some such . |
24 | The present reforms would retain the system of co-operatives , but allow farmers to take possession of livestock from the collective and state farms and to retain up to 30 per cent of their produce for private consumption or sale . |
25 | The non-turbo is expected to put out about 250bhp and to cost closer to £30,000 . |
26 | Finally , as Astbury comments , libraries would claim to contribute the critical component in the market , to provide the counterweight to bestsellerdom , and to contribute substantially to sustaining a wide range of serious books . |
27 | The main roll out of cc:Mail is expected in September and to run through to the end of the year . |
28 | There seemed to be no reason why you should n't , and to decide not to , after having had the thought , seemed to indicate a lack of real caritas . |
29 | Much work will be necessary to help voluntary organisations devise appropriate funding structures , to support and an increasingly central role in service provision , and to respond effectively to the outcome of the government 's efficiency scrutiny . |
30 | But many of us saw it as an approach which emphasised the need to allow the faith of Christ to be incarnated within particular culture and Sir Paul , the former Archbishop of New Zealand took the same stand point as a Maori , in his own address and called delegates present to speak and act as people of hope and to respond sensitively to economic and environment progility and isolation , not only in the Pacific but wherever they are . |