Example sentences of "[to-vb] on at " in BNC.
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1 | Because they have been treated more as adults here , the contrast between this and ordinary school makes it sometimes difficult for them to return and adapt to being treated as children again , so it is obviously preferable for them to continue on at the unit . |
2 | Webb has constantly said he is happy to carry on at Old Trafford and fight for his place . |
3 | Neil gets nod to carry on at Leeds |
4 | Yes , I c I was fortunate to be able to carry on at the same place . |
5 | You do n't need any further underwriting to carry on at that level , but you can do . |
6 | Such an approach enables active work to go on at all times , including those when no change of placement is contemplated or during periods of waiting for a suitable placement to become available . |
7 | Many forms had days when lessons finished at midday , and study had to go on at home . |
8 | Power stations , oil refineries , dairy farms , newspapers , hospitals , simply have to go on at the weekend , and often through nights as well as days . |
9 | Looking for a plausible mechanism is slightly easier , but the search has only just begun , and there are few clues to go on at present . |
10 | You 're scheduled to go on at 10.30pm when coffee has been served . |
11 | Debbie sports a Medicine shirt , to remind us that the difficult West Coast noiseniks were once to play Rollercoaster , but would 've had to go on at about three in the afternoon to meet some venues ' childish curfews . |
12 | There was nothing to go on at all . |
13 | There is absolutely nothing else to go on at all . ’ |
14 | If they are to be more than mere training , then a process of informed reflection has to go on at the same time . |
15 | You used to go on at me about getting out . |
16 | ‘ The first time ’ , Hortensia said , ‘ I poured half a tin of Golden Syrup on to the seat of the chair the Trunchbull was going to sit on at prayers . |
17 | ‘ He is not one of those who is at his desk at dawn and leaves late clutching another three files to work on at home , ’ one said . |
18 | Also available from Bisque is the battery-powered , remote-control Bagno-Stat , which allows you to pre-set the towel radiator heater to come on at specific times and maintain required temperatures . |
19 | At times like that , you call on your mates , and Kenny Everett kindly got us out of a spot of trouble there and agreed to come on at short notice . |
20 | They need no special wiring and may be thermostatically controlled to come on at 3°C . |
21 | But if he was to come on at three o'clock in the morning , the other man called away would n't be replaced . |
22 | A number of smaller PC makers have been forced to pass on at least some of that increase to their customers . |
23 | The Indians were supposed to look on at what was happening as if these two white men in skirts were barmy . |
24 | There was n't any ground or anything to walk on at the end ! |
25 | Have you got a spare T'shirt to put on at the end if it gets cold ? |
26 | Their debts are so large that they will be allowed to stumble on at least until the market shows signs of real improvement — maybe several years away . |
27 | ‘ You 're intending to keep on at Brentwoods then , after the birth ? ’ |
28 | You 've got to keep on at it and it 's like , like us , |
29 | you 've got to keep on at us sometimes , |
30 | In order to make it suitable , Minto believed that it would be necessary to build on at least two extra rooms . |