Example sentences of "[noun] [vb pp] on [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 This is one of the Enemy 's favourite tricks : nothing is more convincing than a half-truth joined on to a lie .
2 His eyes moved on to a chest of drawers , two chairs and a bed he had never seen before .
3 This would be detected by loops buried in the road at what are called key junctions and the data passed on to a computer which would issue the bills later .
4 Footsteps on a wood floor ; then silence as the feet stepped on to a rug .
5 " Regulated business " is defined by the COB Rules to mean either of the following : ( 1 ) Investment business carried on from a UK office ( of the firm or of an appointed representative ) ; this is the case even if the customer is a non-UK client and even if an account officer goes overseas to meet him ; or ( 2 ) Investment business carried on from a non-UK office with or for customers in the UK , except where that business would not be treated as carried on in the UK ( and so would not require FSA authorisation ) if the non-UK office had been a separate person ; this exception , in effect , provides the " foreign business carve-out " from the COB Rules for business with UK customers ( see page 40 below ) ; certain marketing rules are , however , brought back in ( see page 42 below ) .
6 This includes all business carried on from a UK office , even with non-UK customers .
7 " Regulated business " is defined by the COB Rules to mean either of the following : ( 1 ) Investment business carried on from a UK office ( of the firm or of an appointed representative ) ; this is the case even if the customer is a non-UK client and even if an account officer goes overseas to meet him ; or ( 2 ) Investment business carried on from a non-UK office with or for customers in the UK , except where that business would not be treated as carried on in the UK ( and so would not require FSA authorisation ) if the non-UK office had been a separate person ; this exception , in effect , provides the " foreign business carve-out " from the COB Rules for business with UK customers ( see page 40 below ) ; certain marketing rules are , however , brought back in ( see page 42 below ) .
8 In addition , even if it does not have a UK office , a non-UK firm nonetheless needs to be authorised for investment business carried on from a non-UK office with customers or counterparties in the UK on a services basis unless the FSA 's overseas person exemption applies ; this indeed also applies to UK firms ( see page 43 below ) .
9 His long spine ached , and his eyes felt hot and flat against the windshield , like eggs broken on to a rock .
10 The lorry rolled on to a car after its rear wheels were hit by another car which had lost control .
11 In 1974 his property and investment group also faced problems brought on by a credit squeeze and downturn in the building market .
12 In a 7-year follow-up of patients operated on by a surgeon in the USA , a review of death certificates of 264 did not suggest any HIV-related death .
13 This committee was composed of representatives of producers , employees and consumers ; it too , however , could not be much of a check on High Authority action if the two bodies moved on to a collision course — something , in fact , which never occurred .
14 ‘ A deficient libido brought on by a set of socio-physical determinants manifesting in a psycho-sexual syndrome , whereby you can only achieve sensual gratification through the experience of pain . ’
15 It 's a forty foot long boat paddled by twenty people driven on by a drummer and steered by an oarsman
16 The backyards of the houses in this road faced on to a canal .
17 Fig 4 is chenille woven on to a backing of Bramwell Silky using the same design as Fig 1 and knitting at tension 6 .
18 If you touched a picture , there was a brief humming noise and then the food dropped on to a tray in a slot .
19 Staff hung out of the chemists Strickland and Holt , cheering and waving ; men scrambled on to a ledge above the Peter Dominic off-licence ; boys climbed on to the top of bus shelters .
20 Police moved on to a housing estate in St Mellons , Cardiff , after a five-day surveillance operation .
21 As they were looking at the seed packets together , the robin hopped on to a branch near them .
22 A subsequent ramp built on to a fire exit out of one of the rooms was better , though the aforementioned student had long since left .
23 Robin-Anne had her mother 's fair hair , so fair that it looked bleached , and she had her mother 's delicate good looks etched on to a face so pale that it seemed as though her skin must burn if it was exposed to anything more powerful than a light bulb .
24 Food and medicines loaded on to a coach at Kettering in Northamptonshire .
25 Her triumph in securing Dombey as a husband for Edith is dashed by Edith 's unconcealed contempt and resentment after the marriage , and she dies in confusion of mind and physical incapacity brought on by a stroke .
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