Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] on to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This paper presents results for eighteen clients accepted on to the Special Development Team caseload , who were living in NHS mental handicap hospitals at the time of referral , eleven of whom had moved to staffed houses in the community .
2 The local heats take place at Acklam Sports Centre on Wednesday and Thursday , July 29 and 30 with the winners going on to the regional final on August 5 .
3 She was still in a state of shock , her eyes locked on to an imaginary spot in the centre of the windscreen .
4 The winners go on to the national finals in York , the winners of that may have a chance of selection for the Paralympics in Barcelona .
5 On the London stage , the great roles will be plucked like plums , in the Welsh valleys his fame will swell like the fortissimo of a chapel organ and his acts of generosity , recklessness , coarseness and excellent manners tossed on to the fiery legend like dry logs .
6 The longer that socialist parties held on to the old orthodoxies , the worse they have suffered .
7 Many colonnades , staircases , doorways and corridors open on to the Central Courts and , if the bull dance really did take place there , they must have been protected in some way from the rampaging bulls .
8 Er by effectively where we 've got the er combination of colours joining on to the southern bypass , we looked at moving that in a westerly direction to encourage that movement .
9 Successful applicants go on to a three-day assessment course .
10 The creature is often seen on the Idwal Slabs in North Wales and Stanage and Laddow Rocks in the South Pennines but has of recent years migrated on to the Craven limestone .
11 Six metal beer kegs loaded on to a Swiss bound goods train which had stopped at Strasbourg on the same day the vagrant had claimed to be there .
12 Here and there an effort has been made at renovation , but always in deplorable taste , ‘ Georgian ’ bay windows or Scandinavian-style pine porches clapped on to the Victorian and Edwardian facades .
13 There will thus be an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange market .
14 This will therefore lead to an increase in the supply of pounds coming on to the foreign exchange markets .
15 In effect this has meant approximately 400,000 new and inexperienced customers coming on to the overseas market each year , and it is this that has kept the traditional inclusive tour package alive .
16 Er a number of and there 's a further example which I have written to the County Senior Safety Officer about er where there is a halt pedestrians coming on to a main road where a number of vehicles er bounce the pavements to get round traffic turning right at the junction .
17 There is even one report of a couple of Russian geologists hopping on to the bouldery surface of an aa flow on the slopes of the Klyuchevskaya volcano in Kamchatka while it was still moving .
18 The scene was illuminated by large floodlamps bolted on to the striated walls of the huge cavern which enclosed the whole place .
19 Clearing slips are collected by LIFFE officials and the details entered on to a computerized matching system .
20 Gomes went on to an unbeaten century , thanks to Malcolm Marshall .
21 It was night , and as the wind gusted down the iron chimney pipe , a shower of metal flakes spattered on to the wooden floor .
22 ERA is one of more than 50 new ales to come on to the Scottish market in the past year .
23 While tearing out the old central heating and installing new , they had daringly put in new patio windows looking on to the rear garden ( where they had done away with mouldy flowerbeds full of Michaelmas daisies and had built a tiled area complete with ornamental pool and a lion 's head which dripped water into the pool ) , as well as redecorating most of the house in a lighter , more ‘ eighties ’ , way .
24 ‘ Debt ’ , with its overtones of fault and defaulting , embarrassment and mismanagement , gradually changed into the more significant ‘ overindebtedness ’ — though , of course , newspaper subs hung on to the monosyllabic short word which fitted more easily into headlines and made for more racy reading in the copy .
25 After a midweek game in London , the cousins went on to a two-day binge .
26 She laughed , and showed me how one of the windows led on to a tiny balcony and a view over ancient pasture-land ; across the lane spread the branches of a great oak tree .
27 He stared down at his body , and large tears splashed on to the brilliant tattoos of light .
28 Poets were so highly esteemed that it was said that a Delhi-wallah visiting a friend in another part of India would always take with him as a present not jewels or hookahs or fine weapons but a few of Mir Taqi Mir 's new verses copied on to a single sheet of paper .
29 Scottish graduates went on to the major foreign universities , notably to Paris , and to Cologne , Louvain , Bologna and Montpellier .
30 He was sitting in the little hut where you bought your tickets to get on to the Big Wheel .
  Next page