Example sentences of "[vb infin] on to the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If they think peace is impossible , they will hang on to the extra layer of defence these territories provide .
2 It was nearly a mile of steep climbing , he knew , before he would emerge on to the open heathland where The Drover 's Arms stood .
3 Basic Stable Management , is designed as an introductory course and students could follow on to the Senior Horsemaster Course 1 and then onto the Senior Horsemasters Course 2 which is an equivalent level of study to the BHS Stage IV .
4 Now you can move on to the final stage of the diet .
5 I will put that on the side and just with the rest as you 're going Now I 'll move on to the financial statements .
6 Right , that 's the end of that then , so let's move on to the projected sales reports I asked for last time .
7 Let's move on to the medium-term question and get away from the perhaps the more depressing end of this time spectrum at any rate .
8 Could we move on to the constant frequency generator problems er how much do by this ?
9 Now can we move on to the reduced quantities of role equipment .
10 There is now more traffic than ever on the route and any hold-ups will spill on to the surrounding routes .
11 Michael let him drop on to the filthy floor .
12 Yet we must hold on to the basic idea that science discovers the truth of how the world works .
13 Let me press on to the important subject of the council water charge which is set out in schedule 11 .
14 She could go on to the other station but she says I enjoy being in so much I use it .
15 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 .
16 Of these 95 had been declared admissible and , if no negotiated settlement could be reached by the Commission , would go on to the European Court of Human Rights , which had issued 25 judgments in 1989 .
17 Mother used to come too , although she was chapel , and then we would go on to the Methodist service in the evening .
18 On gaining this award , he or she could go on to the National Certificate ( level I ) .
19 He emerged with the trophies for Scottish Lorry Driver of the Year and will go on to the national finals at Telford in Shropshire .
20 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 .
21 ‘ I will go on to the senior slopes , but not because I have anything to prove — to you or anyone else .
22 Right , can we go on to the open day ?
23 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 ?
24 ‘ Perhaps we should pass on to the home-made cakes , ’ said Mervyn .
25 Linear search and scan , another Look and Think activity , can lead on to the visual scanning technique required in discriminating the different shapes of words and letters in a line of print .
26 Insp Peter Clarke told the jury that he drove past Mrs Wilks , who was pregnant , after he saw the man pull on to the hard shoulder , towards a telephone box where she was making an SOS call to police headquarters .
27 I will not make use of the ransom theory in my retelling of the drama , but I shall cling on to the primitive belief , which I believe to be the correct biblical one , that God 's atonement in incarnation and cross was the crucial victory in the Great Battle not only over sin but also over the Devil and the powers of darkness .
28 The disk is round , up to 6 mm diameter covered by spinelets with a crown of many points , 9 or more , the spinelets may extend on to the dorsal part of the arm .
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