Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] on the [noun sg] in " in BNC.

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1 Back room stage so small the performers have to rest their mike stands on the floor in front .
2 The Buchan Meat chairman , Peter McKilligin , argued against change and urged the FASL board to concentrate on the scheme in existence .
3 Thus the research impacted on the team in several important and positive ways .
4 Violence erupted on the pitch in the second-half of the quarter-final first leg and fans hurled missiles on to the pitch .
5 Consumption will rise in period t+4 : But investment will start to fall because , according to the accelerator , the level of investment depends on the change in income ( which has now begun to decrease ) : So , after rising from periods t to t + 3 , income has now stayed the same from period t + 3 to t + 4 .
6 Part of the project will be a search done on the microcomputer in the school library .
7 Packer remarks that the greater willingness to join in collaboration against a consorting male may be related to the greater benefits that the altruism bestows on the recipient in these cases .
8 Success rates of 60–85% ( subjectively assessed ) have been reported for the treatment of mature portwine stains on the face in older patients .
9 Early one morning a horseman appeared on the bank in rich blue robes , his horse caparisoned with coloured ribbons .
10 The mind works on the body in strange ways ; an intense experience , a powerful dream .
11 It is no doubt for this reason that the Syrian foreign minister , Farouk at-Shara , has gone out of his way to emphasise that continued Syrian support depends on the way in which the West responds to what Syria perceives to be the fundamental problem of Middle Eastern security — the Arab-Israeli dispute and the Palestinian issue .
12 In other words , the dispersion of lifetime income depends on the inequality in endowments , the correlation between them , and the shares of wages and capital in total income .
13 The extent of inequality depends on the variation in N and , magnified by the serial correlation induced by al in the former case , but moderated by the term .
14 The party was looking at full employment and a committee reported on the question in January 1944 .
15 Building work starts on the factory in the summer and production will begin early in 1993 .
16 We the undermentioned agree to cut and secure all the corn grown on the farm in a workmanlike manner to my satisfaction ; make bottoms of stacks ; cover up when required ; hoe the turnips twice and turn or lift the barley once ; turn the pease once — each man to find a gaveller .
17 He moved the pen lying on the blotter in front of him slightly to one side .
18 Work began on the reorganisation in August last year and electricians have begun preparing for the computer terminals .
19 Work began on the bridge in 1836 , with Brunel himself in charge , but money ran out after four years and the project was abandoned .
20 An exercise based on the material in the first four parts .
21 WHO is that luscious young girl posing on the beach in romantic Mauritius ?
22 Encouraging a relaxed atmosphere , provision of toys , and letting the child sit on the potty in the middle of family activities can help establish positive attitudes to toileting .
23 I incurred his displeasure on one occasion , there was a young lady sat on the form in front , we had those , where you sat in pairs , on the iron sort of things .
24 ‘ Then we will have world attention riveted on the box in the capital .
25 He defines such sociological groupings as ‘ homogeneous units ’ , which he admits ‘ is an elastic concept , its meaning depending on the context in which it is used ’ ( McGavran 1970:86 ) .
26 The carefully designed tasks , which are a feature of all the books , challenge the practising teacher to reflect on the information in the text and apply it to their own knowledge and experience of teaching .
27 With other inputs being priced at marginal cost , this will lead the purchaser to economize on the input in question , compared with its true resource cost , using more of the relatively cheap inputs .
28 a proprietor can avoid the ordinary liability based on the rule in Rylands v. Fletcher if he can show that the water had escaped without his negligence .
29 There was a goodly stretch of garden between Hilda 's sitting-room and the road , but later that evening at least three people who had passed by on the other side of the wall commented on the row in the Spinners ' Arms .
30 This is certainly true , but it underlines what many consider has been the undue emphasis placed on the PSBR in the government 's policy making .
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