Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] on [prep] [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | That 's why we 'd better move on without any delay . ’ |
2 | ‘ Perhaps for the moment we 'd better get on with this search . ’ |
3 | Prominent advocates of ratification included EC Commission President Jacques Delors ( who declared on Aug. 28 that he " would not stay on for another mandate if the " no " vote won " ) and also both the RPR leader Jacques Chirac and the UDF leader Valéry Giscard d'Estaing , although many RPR and UDF members were opposed to ratification . |
4 | By this time I was feeling very friendly towards them and I might have said something to the effect : " If you will just mosey on down this trail ( meaning the main road between Cambridge and Huntingdon ) you will come to Alconbury , some 15 to 16 miles away . " |
5 | But for some reason Alice would not go on with that thought . |
6 | Perhaps I had better not go on in this way or things will get too mushy and pastoral after all . |
7 | Warning — you can not cast on in this method . |
8 | Few would have dared to predict in the late 1960s that duvets would ever catch on in this country , but today it would be hard to find a British household that does n't have one . |
9 | ‘ Do they always carry on in this fashion ? ’ |
10 | This is certainly the most useful , easily accessible and up-to-date compilation of figures , and it is the one I shall mainly rely on in this book . |
11 | Let me now go on from this point to comment on the so-called death of biblical fundamentalism . |
12 | I ca n't carry on with this indecision . ’ |
13 | In the end I told him , ‘ I ca n't go on with this marriage . |
14 | And then it wo n't go on to this side . |
15 | I 've put it resting on the dish so that any acid from it does n't get on to that bench there . |
16 | The matter will therefore drag on for another month until the next management committee meeting , while Ferguson has to continue his return to the first team under awkward circumstances . |