To.

325. Some uses of to are the following:—

(1) Expressing motion: (a) To a place.

Come to the bridal chamber, Death!—Halleck.

Rip had scrambled to one of the highest peaks.—Irving.

(b) Referring to time.

Full of schemes and speculations to the last.—Parton.

Revolutions, whose influence is felt to this hour.—Parkman.

(2) Expressing result.

He usually gave his draft to an aid...to be written over,—often to the loss of vigor.—Benton

To our great delight, Ben Lomond was unshrouded.—B. Taylor

(3) Expressing comparison.

But when, unmasked, gay Comedy appears,
'Tis ten to one you find the girl in tears.
—Aldrich

They are arrant rogues: Cacus was nothing to them.—Bulwer.

Bolingbroke and the wicked Lord Littleton were saints to him.—Webster

(4) Expressing concern, interest.

To the few, it may be genuine poetry.—Bryant.

His brother had died, had ceased to be, to him.—Hale.

Little mattered to them occasional privations—Bancroft.

(5) Equivalent to according to.

Nor, to my taste, does the mere music...of your style fall far below the highest efforts of poetry.—Lang.

We cook the dish to our own appetite.—Goldsmith.

(6) With the infinitive (see Sec. 268).

Exercise.—Find sentences containing three uses of to.