Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] on [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 They consider that you can only move on from an unhappy experience if you have given it some meaning .
2 Individuals may be more content and morale may be high , but does this necessarily lead on to an improved performance ?
3 Erm we 'd better get on to a few other things .
4 As well as lines , Sumitomo had to install filters at each end of the lines to check that traffic that ought to be kept on the LAN does not disappear on to the WAN .
5 The purpose of having a timetable is so that all relevant information can be digested and acted upon , and so that bids do not carry on for an unreasonable length of time .
6 A " slip " , a temporary recourse to the mood-altering substance or behaviour , may or may not lead on to a full-scale relapse .
7 If the play did end at this point , the real anticlerical joke would be that the Interludium does not go on to the successful trick as the audience might have expected and the clerk might have hoped .
8 Sachin Tendulkar moved quickly on to 19 at which stage the Indian was twice put down , first by Mark Nicholas at short cover and then by David Gower who could not hold on to a hot left-handed chance at second slip , the unlucky bowler on both occasions being Connor .
9 You have to just get on with the next board .
10 He could not get on with the believing Jews from Eastern Europe whose religion and traditions he neither shared nor understood .
11 But she knew that any attempt at this sort of seductive sophistication would be laughably incongruous coming from her quiet , ordinary little self , and in any case she had made no serious plans to leave , so she simply said steadily , ‘ That 's very nice of you , Dr Russell , but I have n't fully worked out my plans yet , and if I do leave I 'll probably sign on with a nursing agency .
12 Arguments about this change continue to rage , and will probably burn on for the foreseeable future .
13 We can now move on to the next stage of the story — the repatriation operations themselves .
14 So I can now move on to the next page which is the growth we 're proposing , given the saving , given the splendid things that are allowed by the erm , by the .
15 I think we 'll , we 'll just about move on to the next paragraph please , is that you lot Paul .
16 The extension of the theatre of war to south-eastern Europe had , despite the German triumph , led to increased concern that the war could now drag on for a long time .
17 This means I can now go on to the fourth stage , a five day course in the Alps , before working for 30 days alongside a qualified guide as a kind of apprentice .
18 She will now go on to the next leg of the Boots Customer Service Award — the district semi-finals .
19 He emerged with the trophies for Scottish Lorry Driver of the Year and will now go on to the national finals at Telford in Shropshire .
20 Back then , they did n't catch on in a big way . ’
21 you can even use on by the front gate , but use a restrained climber such as a large-flowered clematis , not a thorny rose !
22 You do n't go on to the next bit till you 've worked that one out .
23 The Italian dirty tricks department worked overtime as Galvano 's management tried to scream ‘ no contest ’ , claiming a head clash caused the badly cut left eye that meant their man could n't go on after the third round .
24 ‘ There may be benefits for us too — if we do n't get on with the new rector he may only be here for five years , ’ said Miss Duff .
25 But you must have , you know , do n't ramble on about the same thing , right , cos , for , for , for any more than a couple of sentences , cos then , you know , you c start entering into sort of diminishing marginal returns very , very quickly on these short answer questions , what you want to , do is sort of say a sentence about as much as you can rather than go into in depth discussion about erm , any particular aspect .
26 45133 and 50015 will then move on for a short period to the North Yorkshire Moors Railway before returning to Butterley .
27 My brother and I were able to attend these from a very early age , and take part in them , though they would sometimes go on until the early hours of the morning .
28 While I agree that worm watching will probably never catch on as a mass pursuit , something well known here in Cornwall is to observe seagulls tap dancing on the lawn after rain .
29 May I therefore pass on to the Prime Minister the good wishes of all my constituents for his efforts at Maastricht and hope that when he has finished there he will come up to Derbyshire and tell us all about it ?
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