Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [adv prt] to the [num ord] " in BNC.
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31 | They walked to the lift and went up to the fourth floor . |
32 | Then I saw an advert for a new consciousness-raising group in Spare Rib , and went along to the first meeting . |
33 | He put the letter in his Out tray and moved on to another piece of paper , and then he stopped and went back to the first letter . |
34 | It would have been customary to allow the animal its own head , and to hold on to the last truck , or hitch a lift by hanging onto the end . |
35 | If you are one of these people , I suggest that you stop reading this and move on to the next chapter . |
36 | As a result , you keep wishing they 'd wind up this particular gag and move on to the next item , a frustration which makes the film seem drawn out and sluggish . |
37 | Only when that topic is fully discussed can you sit back and think " what next ? " and move on to the next paragraph . |
38 | We eat , we enjoy it or not as the case may be , and move on to the next thing . |
39 | In the examination itself , divide up the time on the basis of how the marks are likely to be distributed ; if you run out of time for your first answer , quickly sketch a conclusion and move on to the next question , so that you have provided at least a general indication of work in all the questions . |
40 | There , it seemed , commentary was powerless and pointless ; he would simply read the text aloud and move on to the next poem . |
41 | Then the only jump instruction that is logically necessary ( though others may be provided for efficiency ) is one to jump if the condition code is set to a specified binary bit pattern ( or perhaps a specified group of patterns ) , and to drop through to the next instruction if the condition code is set to any other pattern . |
42 | Lear is evidently pleased with what Goneril has said , since he awards her a rich part of England , and moves on to the second movement , where again two daughters speak . |
43 | Tom turns his head in embarrassment and has it explained to him that his regular caddie has gone back to Orville Moody , and I 'm his new one , so he says , ‘ OK ’ , and walks on to the first tee . |
44 | The house itself is , not surprisingly , a little younger and dates back to the 16th century when it was owned by the great-great-aunt of President George Washington . |
45 | are now going to look at these figures and come back to the next meeting er with some comments , with regards to their projects . |
46 | Disconsolately , we got back into the rickshaws and set off to the next address . |
47 | I smiled understanding and held on to the last wedge of the broken window , catching glimpses of the brown Yucay River snaking its way between the terraced hills . |
48 | If you do not reply , the PP does not repeat but goes on to the next question . |
49 | Erm but to come back to the first criterion which says avoid the greenbelt , I know exactly what you mean when you say avoid the greenbelt , but if in the context of the wording before that where it says to be located beyond the outer boundary of the York greenbelt , do you need to have criterion one ? |
50 | On no account should it be regarded as something through which the traveller passes quickly while hurrying on to the next destination . |
51 | erm And we 've already lost planes in the erm war so far , and we have only a limited number there , while going back to the last world war |