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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Elijah heard a divine message sending him back to troubled Israel , with intuition as to definite things to do , one of which was to find a successor to carry on the prophetic ministry .
2 It was the only Italian name I could think of in a hurry and I did n't have the nerve to put on the right accent to go with it . ’
3 Their position was well summed up by the Carers National Association , which has stated that the current rules could have ’ disastrous consequences ’ for the family and friends of the claimant who may have moved into the home to take on the caring responsibilities .
4 If one person in a twin room cancels , we reserve the right to pass on the full cost of the twin room to the person using that room .
5 The only idea that seemed feasible was for the Collector to put on the rusty suit of armour which stood in the banqueting hall and to go out there with a scythe .
6 He is the natural author to take on the popular character to so successfully revived in ‘ Batman 2 ’ .
7 TRAINERS have shunned the chance to take on the brilliant miler Zafonic at Royal Ascot next week .
8 The bell usually tolls for one of the big championship teams on cup day … this is cricket 's FA Cup … where the small teams the non leaguers get a chance to take on the big boys … the pros …
9 The members simply have not the time at their disposal to take on the continuous pressure needed to effectively construct a platform for alternative or opposing views .
10 The invitations can be in the shape of a banana , make a large banana to put on the front door , and decorate the room with bananas and long yellow balloons .
11 Jesus had come to Jerusalem , the capital of Judaism to take on the religious authorities and at this point in time in this Gospel it looks like he 's lost , gon na be dead in a couple of days .
12 In the case of Russia , revisionist research has underlined the manner in which the specific nature of the tsarist regime conditioned the decision to take on the Central Powers .
13 The installation of a Lasercomp in 1979 enabled the Division to take on the filmsetting work of the Computer Assisted Typesetting unit as well as expand the range of their own setting .
14 He may simply not have had enough money to take on the extra land and the work as required for it .
15 The invitations can be clock-shaped with the hands pointing to the starting time , and you can make a large clock to put on the front door .
16 Very few general hospital units , however , have recognized how important this service was to individual patients and now it usually falls to a beleaguered social worker to take on the complex task of sorting out welfare benefits ; social workers are not , however , experts in this field and it is a time-consuming task that few of them relish .
17 Small wonder that Heinz Dürr , AEG 's long-serving chief executive , left at the end of last year to take on the unglamorous job of running Germany 's state-owned railway company .
18 It is a sufficient approximation to take on the right-hand side of eqn ( 7.20 ) , so that .
  Next page