Example sentences of "[noun pl] [to-vb] on to the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Some financial planners have worked out another loophole , telling their clients to hang on to the part of their income paid in company shares , because taxes on capital gains are unlikely to rise under President Clinton and may even fall . |
2 | It was as though they were marching up great soaring bridges to get on to the screen , where they would enter into the films we had come to see . |
3 | Teachers have constantly to buttonhole each other as they pass in the staffroom and tack extra things to do on to the bottom of each other 's already overlong agendas . |
4 | The passion of his kisses on her throat were leaving her weak and she had to will her fingers to hold on to the bodice . |
5 | He did not speak in the room , allowing his clothes to fall on to the floor in the darkness , waiting for some stir or sign from Rose , but the only sound in the room was the brushing of his own clothes falling in the darkness . |
6 | Amid mounting chaos , Iliescu issued a radio appeal to factory workers and others to come on to the streets to defend the revolution . |
7 | Middlesbrough is urging its residents to jump on to the recycling bandwagon . |
8 | The result is an easy panel of lace with no cams to put on to the needlebed or dials to be moved ( see sample 2 ) . |
9 | He allowed his papers to drop on to the cabin floor , and his eyes lit up with interest . |
10 | The crowds on the platform shrieked at them and banged on the glass , then ran to the end of the carriages to climb on to the roof . |