Example sentences of "[verb] take on the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 AS THE title of his admirable autobiography — Jousting with Giants — admits , Jim McLean has always enjoyed taking on the Scottish game 's major forces .
2 A local trust has now been set up to champion the restoration of the landscape ; and the Landmark Trust has taken on the principal building , the splendid banqueting house , constructed with three great arches , overlooking the valley like one of the fountains of baroque Rome .
3 To prove his point he has taken on the legal profession and , with no legal training whatsoever , tied judges in such knots they have overruled each other .
4 Yes well , for the experimental aircraft programme British Aerospace specified what G E C had to do and er a a this time , if you like , Deutsch Aerospace has taken on the equivalent role that B A E had for the experimental aircraft programme and er Deutsch Aerospace are not without experience in flight controls they have .
5 In his day he has taken on the big guns of industry , commercialised culture and of whole countries ( who can easily forget his devastating portrait of Mrs Thatcher and the fawning Saatchi brothers ? ) .
6 Mark Jones , the exhibition 's curator , has taken on the dual task of tracing the history of forgery from archaic Babylon to contemporary California , while at the same time tracing the history of how forgery is understood .
7 All four are , for example , victimised in different ways by the taboo of illegitimacy and the play focuses on Rose , who has been kept from the knowledge that Jackie is her mother by grandmother Margaret who has taken on the maternal role .
8 Matthew Spender ( son of the poet Stephen ) has taken on the harder task of writing about Tuscany from within .
9 B U choose the Merry Widow because their last show White Horse was so successful the B U Musical Society have decided to take on the ambitious task of tackling the Merry Widow for their next production .
10 How could she expect to take on the powerful Lucenzo Salviati — a man with centuries of trickery in his blood — and come out top ?
11 ‘ I enjoy taking on the big battalions , ’ he says .
12 In the late 1950s , however , his Office was still very small and not equipped to take on the extra load .
13 If the family were going to take on the outside world , they 'd do it in eccentric style , his father had implied .
14 Gadebridge probably began life as a small farm , but from Period 4 , during the third century , it began to take on the additional characteristics , even to the extent of a gatehouse , or porter 's lodge .
15 I had put on around a stone during the year and I was beginning to take on the traditional pear shape .
16 Towards evening , when the grass started to take on the dry crackle of hay , it was as if the small handshakings were springing up in the meadow .
17 Unaware of the death of the sect 's figurehead leader , Grant , Springfield and their patchwork assembly of troops were preparing to take on the real power behind the throne — the sinister oriental who was using the organisation as a front for his Triad drugs network .
18 Opposition groups are preparing to take on the Communist Party in Bulgaria 's first free elections for more than 40 years which are to be fixed by next May , but dissident leaders have called for a postponement .
19 If we 're confident that you can afford to take on the extra commitment , we 're quite happy to agree a second loan .
20 Class 5 leader Gen. Suchinda Kraprayoon retained his post as Army C.-in-C. and was promoted to take on the additional post of Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces , in place of Gen. Sunthorn Kongsompong .
21 Gould would also be reunited with Natty and Jemmy , who he planned to take on the Namoi expedition .
22 I can even remember when Finnegans Wake was thought to be incomprehensible and the gentleman sitting on my right , George Craig , is almost , but not quite , my contemporary at this university and I was genuinely delighted when he agreed to take on the herculean task of giving a lecture a centenary lecture on James Joyce .
23 What Butthole Surfers have done , what made and makes them so crucial , is that they 've taken on the sonic possibilities bequeathed still unexplored and underdeveloped by acid rock but have jettisoned many of the disabling attitudes that originally trammelled that music — sophistication , expertise , the counter-cultural impulse to edify .
24 The dungeon had taken on the squalid smell of the cave back in hell .
25 Hitler had taken on the mysterious Soviets , but why had he chosen to invade Russia and not the British Isles ?
26 Finnish Foreign Minister Pertti Salolainen , leading the EFTA side since Finland had taken on the rotating EFTA chairmanship on July 1 , confirmed on July 30 that the talks would restart in September .
27 But he left to take on the run-down Staffordshire country house called Alton Towers and made it into a top leisure and theme park .
28 They have taken on the single-seat Broburn Wanderlust sailplane stored since the mid-1940s at Farnborough , Hants .
29 Multico have taken on the British marketing rights for the Delta range of machinery .
30 This remark had important implications in the theory of the technique of psychoanalysis , where transference — the way the analyst comes to take on the emotional elements of a parent figure for the analysand — plays a key part in understanding the therapeutic effects of psychoanalysis .
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