Example sentences of "on to [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The Guardian report on the Swindon game praises Strachan at length and goes on to critically assess Rocky in the light of his lack of match fitness and his attitude .
2 Post it on to here !
3 Lunch over , I walked on to where the Coast to Coast Path and Pennine Way cross above Ease Gill Force .
4 And so Beth allowed herself to be taken at an awkward pace along the wharf and on to where David and Cissie were saying their final farewells .
5 He achieved a First in his preliminary examination at Trinity College , Cambridge and went on to also get a First in the History Tripos Part 1 .
6 From the rejection of the community Marvell moves on to also flee from the labours and heartache of human love .
7 Well , there was one thing sure : whatever that feeling was he had n't passed it on to even one of his three sons .
8 If I sound euphoric I make no apologies , It has been a superb period for English rugby and will also be a hard act to follow , but after the weekend of the Irish visit I am sure that we can go on to even greater things from here .
9 As individuals move into higher tax bands they pay higher marginal tax rates and move on to even flatter portions of the tax schedule .
10 Families , which essentially means women , already provide massive , unpaid , largely unrecognized care and it is vital that policies of decentralization and community care do not too readily shift an even greater burden on to both the elderly themselves and their caring relatives .
11 Along the riverside , hay would have been cropped several times through the summer , and then , at the end of the summer , the animals who had been on the fallow would be turned on to both the meadowland and the stubble of the arable before coming into the paddocks by the village over the winter , to be stall-fed on the hay cut from the meadow .
12 She had to have something to hold on to when she disappeared into the black hospital pit .
13 There were sudden patches of light that you came out on to when you least expected it .
14 That brass ring at her neck , attached to the zip all the way down that dress , like the ring you hold on to when you leap from a plane , plunging in free fall till you dare no more , then you pull the ring down , down and float in airy freedom , master of all you survey .
15 Once you have become accustomed to selecting the needles , sliding the lace carriage and moving the main carriage in the correct order , you will be able to move on to rather more elaborate lace patterns .
16 To date almost 100 graduates have participated in the GEP and the majority have gone on to successfully launch their own businesses .
17 The order of discussion will follow the traditional one : electrostatics first , followed by steady currents , then we shall move on to slowly varying phenomena , and reach finally the most interesting part , fast-varying phenomena , exhibiting the full beauty of Maxwell 's wonderful equations .
18 On to tonight 's game , obviously you got one or two injuries going into it er unfortunate th Gary obviously i has got a recurrence of that hamstring strain because he got er two of your three goals at the weekend .
19 He went on to briefly visit the memorial to the 21 who died outside the vast shipyards where Lech Walesa , now the country 's president , made his name as head of Solidarity .
20 It 's a manifestation of the marvellous relationship you had with your husband and that 's something you should hand on to dearly .
21 ‘ It was like , well , these groups have all got together and thought ‘ Well , we 'll get these haircuts and these clothes and it will give us a concept that people can grab hold on to straight away ’ .
22 Oh we 're on to tomorrow now .
23 Well yes okay that 's a possibility and that 's something that we 'll come on to tomorrow .
24 The disease theory was discounted early on by Reinhart Huttl of the University of Freiburg , who grafted affected shoots on to otherwise healthy trees .
25 From Barretts mill , the Chelt flowed on to successively power Alstone Upper and Lower , and Arle Mills .
26 This he threw with a flicking movement on to a pile of scrap iron before making his way towards them , kicking out of his path and on to yet another pile the remnants of what had been a pair of trousers .
27 They open on to not only the main thoroughfares but also narrow alleys like Bucklersbury , which are so characteristic of the City and are rapidly being transformed out of recognition .
28 well , if they were interested in speaking to me I could probably put them on to not just myself but members of my flight , it is n't my flight it 's flight erm and there are several of us in Scotland who could come in and do things like that for a modest remuneration erm
29 The raid had been a triumphant vindication of Stirling 's theory that his unit could operate regardless of the phase of the moon and could get on to heavily defended targets .
30 But the information was not passed on to either the hospital or the police .
  Next page