Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] [adv prt] on [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 More of them got in on the industrial act — Sri Lanka was the latest brave new industrializing country , while India finally took off as a major supplier of iron and steel on the global stage .
2 I had my camera with me and I saw there was a ladder up on the top deck and when I got up on the top deck it was quite a giddy height , not to be bit I looked at the mast then I climbed up the mast up three quarters of the way up the mast and er the view from up there looked right down on the causeway .
3 I got off on the wrong foot , and I 'm never going to get it right now .
4 ‘ Even when I got by on a fast straight , where the extra power of my machine was beneficial , I thought it might be part of his plan to let me go in front and force me into making a mistake . ’
5 ‘ I 'm happy ’ , ‘ I 'm settled ’ , ‘ Now I know what it feels like ’ , ‘ I got out on the right side ’ .
6 Devlin said , ‘ In forty-one , I got back on a neutral boat , a Brazilian cargo ship from Ireland that put in at Lisbon , but that 's a tricky one .
7 Klondyke Trading Co are responsible for providing a variety of straps for both the home market and the world , but as I found out on a recent visit there 's more to making one guitar strap than meets the eye , let alone producing thousands .
8 The tent is extremely stable especially in very high winds as I found out on a few wet and wild nights .
9 At four and a half thousand pound of sales we start to pay extra fift in fact at four thousand pound we start but it 's only a small bonus so I home in on the bigger one .
10 I thought you said there 'd be no problem if I came in on a six-month permit ? ’
11 I came out on the Good Friday and , on the Saturday morning , stitches still in and everything , I got up and thought to myself : ‘ I 'm going to have a smoke ’ .
12 The cheapest way to go was via Colombo and so I dropped in on the local centre there .
13 When I look back on the long friendship , I realize that I need not have had certain misgivings about troubling Eliot or taking up his time — misgivings due to temperamental diffidence rather than to genuine modesty , I am afraid — because he was both generous of his time and solicitous about the welfare of those in whom lie took an interest .
14 Below , I look down on the differing surfaces , the differing states of ripeness from light green through to gold .
15 I plonked down on the hard wooden sofa and began musing : was he telling the truth ?
16 I set up on the same spot as in the previous summer , but this time my luck was different .
17 So in July 1982 I set off on a similar journey .
18 But that alone did n't daunt my spirit , so I set off on the second day with a little more trepidation but just as much determination to learn to sail .
19 Then , once dressed , I set out on the great excursion : shopping , errands , and a treat in a cafe .
20 And so I set out on the long journey back to Thornfield .
21 Last year I set out on the same quest , but met with little success .
22 I popped out on the sixth-floor roof and had a cigarette . ’
23 At first I managed to get hold of two pictures by Popova , then the thread broke off and , completely by chance , I stumbled back on the right trail .
24 Yet when I looked back on the last hour or so I could come to only one conclusion .
25 I lay back on the hot canvas of a recliner and closed my eyes , soaking it in .
26 I lay back on the empty bed and looked at my watch .
27 As I lay back on the clean white sheet tucked round the hard mattress of the sick room bed and faded into a temporary oblivion , I thought to myself that perhaps early retirement would be no bad thing to consider after all .
28 I lay down on the Pennine moors
29 During my spell on the late desk I went out on no fewer than eleven murders .
30 Editor , — Recently , as a trainee general practitioner , I went out on an urgent call at lunchtime on a weekday .
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