Example sentences of "always [vb infin] to the " in BNC.
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1 | Officers are dependent upon their dischargers to do their job efficiently and must always think to the future when they may need the active co-operation of a polluter . |
2 | But they would n't take that trouble , but they 'd always speak to the uniform policemen , if or if they heard anyone smashing glass , but they would n't go out of their way . |
3 | In other words , the effects of government expenditure on private profit is a far more complicated process than Bacon and Eltis imply and it does not always work to the detriment of private capital and private profit . |
4 | The Church does not always use to the full all the gifts that women have . |
5 | The dog will always run to the owner to be reassured . |
6 | Some of them do not always stick to the regulations as we should like . |
7 | ‘ Does it always keep to the deep water ? ’ |
8 | The signs are a good thing because they remind drivers that they should always keep to the speed limit . |
9 | Godwin also offered guidance on moral problems ; we must always look to the general good , calculate the consequences of the courses of action open to us , and arrive at an unbiased decision . |
10 | First , they can always return to the solicitor to seek more details of the basis of charging ; many bills are uninformative about this . |
11 | If you do , you should always return to the subroutine and exit via the RETURN statement . |
12 | Do , do groups always have to the behaviour and performance of their members or can they do the opposite ? |
13 | By the same argument , the way such factors are constructed discursively does not always correspond to the role which they play in other , non-discursive , forms of racial discrimination . |
14 | They used to do that : the chief inspector walking down on a Saturday morning in full regalia and one of these fellows would nod and they 'd always walk to the corner , and the Chief would n't say anything about it because they were on the corner and not causing any obstruction . |
15 | The title Duke of Cornwall and the estate to go with it dates back to 1337 , when Edward III created it to give his eldest son , the Black Prince , an income and somewhere to live ; it was he who decreed that it should always go to the eldest son . |
16 | The last word does not always go to the fastest gun . |
17 | But it does n't always go to the front of them . |
18 | So that erm erm the collection of of the loan was erm quite a major operation in itself because though erm there was a form of agreement and each agreement had to have two sureties and erm you could always go to the sureties if the student after the course |
19 | ‘ Twelve months later the conclusion is that the race does n't always go to the swift — even if it is the way the bookmaker bets , ’ commented Mike Gaston , the station 's managing director , who took over running the company just a year ago . |
20 | We could always go to the pictures and then go back to ours or something ? |
21 | You can always defer to the " off-stage " higher authority ( which means you 're less likely to have a revolution on your hands ! ) ; you can seek assistance ; you can still play Devil 's Advocate ; you can co-ordinate ; bring information and , importantly , transfer responsibility to the children . |
22 | And , if the weather is inclement , people can always retire to the specially erected marquee at the side of the showrooms . |
23 | Six lots of none will always come to the same as |
24 | We may contrast with this the phrase semantic components , where the two interpretations are virtually indistinguishable ; it will be seen that this phrase will always come to the same thing in practical terms , whether we regard the components as being semantic , with ascriptive use of the adjective , or as components connected with semantics , taking the associative interpretation . |
25 | Although many sentences with this surface sequence will always come to the same thing pragmatically , whichever of the two constructions is assumed ( this is one of the features which can make careful syntactic analysis such a delicate matter ) , it is nonetheless possible to find some which are open to either syntactic interpretation but with a clear difference in meaning ; this will then help to throw the syntactic difference into relief . |
26 | Virginsky will always belong to the Petrashevsky Circle of Dostoevsky 's own youth , as well as to the ill-assorted group that dances to Verkhovensky 's tune in the late 1860s . |
27 | Although ‘ change ’ perhaps suggests dynamism and enthusiasm — in keeping with a successful Club — the energy did not always stretch to the players on the course , for here complaints of slow play were regularly made , doubtless aggravated by televised golf tournaments in which players spent many minutes lining up putts . |
28 | Peter Rogers knew he had hit a gold mine , even if it did n't always seem to the performers that he was totally on their side . |
29 | Even when the new models were being produced they did n't always get to the dealers : a dispute at Toleman , which distributes Fords , caused vast stockpiles . |
30 | Cos you see , perhaps it did n't get to that teacher , you see , that 's what happens , the letters do n't always get to the right people . |