Example sentences of "to catch up [prep] [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The rental sector meanwhile provides — along with all the box-office successes which nowadays transfer to tape within a few months and probably need no further introduction — the chance to catch up on a variety of ( often more deserving ) movies which have been less widely seen in cinemas here . |
2 | Kylie admits that the tour of the chic boutiques in Paris , London and New York gave the sisters a chance to catch up on a lot of the times they had missed when the demands of television companies just had to take priority over family . |
3 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
4 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
5 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
6 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
7 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
8 | Well Zoe Muir decided to catch up on the progress of our other volunteer , Katy Clark . |
9 | ‘ Now that we only have the one line , we want to catch up on the backlog of maintenance and repairs . |
10 | With the paperwork finished , it 's across to the Mess for a cup of tea and to catch up on the rest of the news . |
11 | The London International Opera Festival is now a regular fixture in the June calendar , and though its scale may be relatively modest — a skilful combination of performances annexed from the seasons of the Royal Opera and English National Opera with one- off ventures mounted by small-scale professional companies — it serves as a useful chance for the capital to catch up with a variety of new work that has failed to find a niche elsewhere . |
12 | If the Council did a good deal to catch up with the agenda of the Council of Trent , it did rather little to face the real agenda confronting the whole human and Christian community in the last decades of this century . |
13 | This invitation is also open to former members of the Scholarship Scheme , several of whom have found the Summer School an excellent ‘ refresher course ’ , and a way to catch up with the progress of their colleagues . |
14 | They seem to be trying to catch up with the West of the Fifties . ’ |
15 | She refused to look upon herself as an invalid , but it might be sensible to take a tonic , say , during the coming winter months , and to catch up with the loss of sleep she had so cheerfully endured . |
16 | ‘ Thoroughbreds will always be able to catch up in a race over a long distance . |