Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] on to the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I can not see how they could be established in British literary education , where there are no graduate schools as such , and the narrow , uphill tunnel of A-level work leads on to the rocky , cloudy uplands of the undergraduate degree , with its confused mixture of practical criticism and thematic study , analysis and literary history , coverage and special subjects .
2 As confidence in the concept rises the emphasis of the design work moves on to the scheming phase .
3 At the end of the second row , the Design Controller moves on to the next row of the pattern , ready for you to knit the pattern stitches of the second row of the pattern on your third knitting row .
4 Once the first grading has been successfully completed , the student goes on to the next stage of training , which concerns itself with basic semi-free sparring .
5 Even if Hanson holds on to the British end of the ARC operation , it still has a long list of ConsGold assets to offload including :
6 The exhibition moves on to the National Gallery , Washington , the following month .
7 Their army flees on to the exposed sea bed , and there gets bogged down .
8 If the business is a goer , the entrepreneur moves on to the full Enterprise Allowance system and gets back any surplus funds .
9 That , my Lord , the matter moves on to the fifteenth of October on which day er the plaintiff together with Mr attended Richmond Magistrates Court and obtained a protection order from the justices in relation to the premises and then on the sixteenth of October erm this was the day when things started to go very badly wrong for the plaintiff because Mr by now had returned from his holiday and come back cautiously , he apparently attended after his holiday and on this day Mr was told that , by Mrs that it was not possible to proceed with the financial er dealings that had been agreed between them unless the Frinton property was offered as security .
10 The ribbon of tarmac goes on to the lonely outpost of Leck Fell House , a speck of civilisation in a wide panorama that has no other sign of life .
11 Inside , a rectangle of delicately latticed jali screens gives on to the brick-built central chamber .
12 The Bishop goes on to the human eye , asking rhetorically , and with the implication that there is no answer , " How could an organ so complex evolve ? "
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