Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] on [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | She added : ‘ When he eventually got on to the train he left the bird on a seat next to his cabin . |
2 | This in effect meant that PFF actually did 45 sorties , but please to remember that few Pathfinder aircrew elected to opt out at the 45 mark and most carried on to the magic 60 , And further take note that over 100 PFF aircrew managed the ton ( 100 sorties ) . |
3 | Dummies have since caught on as a fashion accessory at raves , but whether the trend was sparked by the emergence of Ketamine , or whether it 's just a way to keep the burning under control , is lost to myth and drug folklore . |
4 | He could see in a three hundred and sixty degree sphere via the pod sensor modules , just as he could feel the ambient temperature , and even smell the lubricant that someone had carelessly leaked on to the floor . |
5 | With only three minutes remaining in their Sharwood 's Irish Senior Cup semi-final clash against Pegasus , Sinead , who had only come on at the start of the second-half , popped up to score the only goal of the game . |
6 | and you slid down twisting on to the grass . |
7 | The world will applaud , and rightly press on with the lifting of sanctions . |
8 | This obviously adds on to the cost of your basic computer but if you are a small business it is n't an enormous amount . |
9 | Eight minutes later it was 2–0 when Des Aitcheson , scoring from close range after Neil Fullerton 's near post flick , had been brilliantly turned on to a post by the visiting goalkeeper . |
10 | A gold ring from the port of Mochlos shows a goddess sailing on a boat with a shrine apparently built on to the afterdeck conveying a portable shrine from one coastal site to another . |
11 | Starting from the simplest and most chaste of forms , rooted in a combination of pioneering vernacular and colonial buildings , the American station swiftly moved on to a riot of revivalist and hybrid styles in a complex process of architectural grafting which mirrored the increasingly diverse origins of its immigrant population . |
12 | Nicholson wanted to loiter with the man who — in his eyes — could pluck with ease a flower he could only look on at a distance . |
13 | In terms of how rant and rave for probably not very long and you do n't get aggressive behaviour , got nowhere else to go , you got ta get to come back down hang on to the chair to grim death absolute shambles never used it like this . |
14 | So hang on for the ride , Pat . |
15 | She was about to turn to him and demand to be taken back when he suddenly swung on to a track she had not seen from the distance . |
16 | In total therefore there are seven times as many graduate men among all employees , so getting on to the wage profiles that grow fastest and last longest is very much a matter of educational credentials . |
17 | ‘ I 'm going to turn into one of those old guys who are constantly harping on about the war , about ration books and bomb shelters . |
18 | Yet the substance had only gone on to the Jockey Club 's list of prohibited substances a mere ten months before Aliysa failed her dope test . |
19 | And as everything slipped away she could only hold on to the thought that somehow her murderer knew who she was . |
20 | So I think for this run I 'd better press on with the book . ’ |
21 | ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’ |
22 | By twelve o'clock he had usually earned enough to live on for the day . |
23 | The San Giorgio case is also of interest for present purposes in that it accepts that Community law does not prevent a national legal system from disallowing repayment of charges where to do so would entail unjust enrichment of the recipient , in particular where the charges have been incorporated into the price of goods and so passed on to the purchaser . |
24 | Apart from the few wives and daughters of master printers who had picked up something of the trade in the family firm , the first women compositors in Britain to receive anything like a " systematic training " were apparently taken on by the firm of McCorquodale of Newton-le-Willows in about 1848.12 It was a little-known experiment that did not last . |
25 | Lewis suddenly wandered on to the stage and started playing , hotly pursued by the band , who had not been tipped off . |
26 | He missed out on only Carry On Up The Jungle , Carry On Girls and Carry On England , the penultimate in the series . |
27 | That 's reach a common understanding which reflects the realities of a relationship we enjoy at the present day so that we can all get on with the task of serving our members and forming a Labour government . |
28 | If that could be added that would achieve my objectives and we can all get on to the debate about V A T on . |
29 | ‘ Then you 'd better get on with the job quickly . ’ |
30 | Mrs. Mott had better get on with the job of cancelling them . |