Example sentences of "[be] [vb pp] on [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Also , the land which stretches back to Rockhill Farm from Swingswang on the opposite side of that road is all part and parcel of the County Council smallholdings , and only two fields away they sold off a piece of land a few years ago which has now been developed on to the frontage of the Banbury Road , which is in fact the Cromwell Business Park .
2 It is in the interview that many of these aspects of the post are checked on with the candidate .
3 Two square escutcheon plates , each incised with a cross , have been riveted on to the surface above and below the keyhole .
4 Sir Geoffrey is also required to examine the basis on which share deals which are carried on outside the Exchange can be handled by the new clearing house .
5 And all of these functions are carried on by the ego .
6 But the press had already been tipped off : Mrs Simpson 's car had been booked on to the Channel steamer in her own name .
7 In the past some craft-trading had been carried on beyond the vicinity , but this and nearly all other economic ties with the Ukraine to the south and their fellow Great Russians to the north had stopped .
8 South Cambridgeshire District Council has recognized the important part that environmental health officers have to play within the work of the District Council , and for some time now the work of the Department has been carried on under the hat of the Legal , Housing and Health Director .
9 ‘ It should be stressed that no debts arising from non–payment of the community Charge have been added on to the Council Tax bills . ’
10 The draft timetable will have been decided on at the sale strategy stage and will be to an extent a function of the marketing process chosen .
11 Lateral and medial stabilisers are incorporated on to the outsole to prevent rollover while the design features a flex notch , which has been cut into the outsole to counter any restriction of movement .
12 Names of infant Mulverins had recently been scratched on to the wall .
13 It could , because you could put and a sailing boat might have been pushed on by the tide .
14 ‘ And those statistics are transferred on to the computer ? ’
15 In October 1626 he had been drafted on to the loan commission for Yorkshire , and was also a commissioner in June 1627 to finance shipbuilding using recusancy fines , which commissions were headed by Sir John Savile ( later first Baron Savile of Pontefract , q.v . ) .
16 A good example is a manufacturer who sells to a reseller and requires the reseller to grant him an indemnity in respect of third party claims for product liability made against the manufacturer arising in relation to the products of the manufacturer that are sold on by the reseller .
17 She had meant only to run up the road for a breath of air when the rain stopped and she had been drawn on into the spring evening until now she had half an hour 's brisk walk to get home .
18 The super smooth 2.5-litre intercooled turbo-diesel , quite the best of the bunch , is pepped up 4bhp to 98bhp ; the 3-litre V-6 petrol has been breathed on to the tune of an extra 8bhp , at 147bhp .
19 Henry had been invited on to the chat show chiefly because the new snooker champion was the guest of honour .
20 Sexy blonde curls have been pinned on to the crown for this look from John Peers
21 After their 10km walk they were invited to Backnong for a special lunch that had been laid on by the Canal Dignitaries of the town .
22 So it is all the more striking to see what happens when those known language experiences are translated on to the page of a book .
23 He had been brought on to the board of the Citizens Theatre , Glasgow , by its founder , the playwright James Bridie .
24 Discussions over the need for increased powers for the Scottish party were initiated by its nationalist wing but have been seized on by the left as a means of ensuring that Labour 's different electoral aims north and south of the Border do not lead to alienation of the party 's traditional supporters in Scotland .
25 He was relying on the earlier case of Nichol v Martyn [ 1799 ] 2 Esp 732 , but in Wessex Dairies Ltd v Smith [ 1935 ] 2 KB 80 Maugham LJ cast doubt on both those judgments and so far as the modern law is concerned they should not be relied on to the extent that they indicate the employee can canvass or issue circulars to customers of his employer before he leaves .
26 In an important sense , Hugh may almost be looked on as the instigator of the Investiture decree of 1078 , for he had gone to Rome for his episcopal consecration four years earlier in order to avoid contact with a secular ruler , who claimed the right both to nominate and to invest his nominee in his episcopal office .
27 We do n't know but I do n't know but that is a doubt as to whether the manufacturing flavour of the past will be carried on through the decade .
28 You leapt for the cleaner banks and I allowed myself to be carried on by the filth of deceit , of shame , and of a guilt that even now I can not put into public or private words .
29 Meanwhile Home with great determination had been to the hospital in London and obtained Macmillan 's written resignation , which was read to the Conference on Thursday afternoon : ‘ I hope that it will soon be possible for the customary processes of consultation to be carried on within the party about its future leadership . ’
30 The new-born child is virtually a clean slate , to be written on by the world .
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