Example sentences of "[pron] [noun pl] on [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I turned from my contemplation of the inclement evening and eased my buttocks on to the warm radiator beneath the window .
2 ‘ If I 've got my pants on in the second scene , I think they 've sent me the wrong script , ’ he says .
3 Robyn held it out at arm 's length , glanced at it and then cursed as she saw the blood that dripped from her fingers on to the black plastic .
4 Shelley sipped her coffee , then put the mug down and swung her legs on to the cool tiled floor .
5 My lodgings were in the comfortable Kirkapol Guest House which fronts on to a marvellous tempting beach .
6 Your physical response to her moves on to a different plane .
7 If we translate the colloquial meaning of ‘ nice guy ’ into its Darwinian equivalent , a nice guy is an individual that assists other members of its species , at its own expense , to pass their genes on to the next generation .
8 Even when she was too tired to read she sought escape in romance-cubes she spent all her wages on at the Madreidetic shop .
9 It was a successful scheme , popular with travellers and with hoteliers who clamoured to get their hotels on to the prestigious Cook 's list .
10 His snowdrops were already wilting like wax candles in the warmth of his hand , and as he copied the mourners ahead of him and stood up , one flower slipped between his fingers on to the rust-coloured floor .
11 He wanted Mrs Bottomley to pass his concerns on to the Prime Minister .
12 But when the first baiter led his teams on to an unploughed field he did not have to trouble his head about the width of the stetches : that had been fixed by long usage and probably appeared to him then as unalterable an aspect of the landscape as the roads and the hedges .
13 From London you can be putting your boots on at the Bloody Bridge car park in less than three hours if you have a mind to .
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