Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb mod] [vb infin] on [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I must go on with the post , but I 'll send somebody to help you as soon as I can . |
2 | His widow , Margaret , said : ‘ Alfred told me that I should carry on with the case if he died , and that is exactly what I will do . ’ |
3 | That 's why I was thinking I might hang on to the Volvo for another two years until you 've got your own car and then I can buy what I really want . |
4 | ‘ You keep the paper , I 'll haud on to the cigars . ’ |
5 | I will put that on the side and just with the rest as you 're going Now I 'll move on to the financial statements . |
6 | ‘ You away in and I 'll go on to the hotel by myself . |
7 | Ellen , please ask a maid to find some dry clothes for me , and then I 'll go on to the village . |
8 | ‘ I 'll get on to the emergency services immediately . |
9 | You bring him back tomorrow or I 'll get on to the police . ’ |
10 | And I 'll get on to the and we 'll get them an appointment out to you as quick as we can . |
11 | There we are and I 'll I 'll get on to the Royal this morning . |
12 | There we are and I 'll I 'll get on to the Royal this morning . |
13 | In which case , if our relationship was already wrecked beyond repair , I could hold on to the phetam . |
14 | It was at this moment that I decided I must learn to dance , so that I could stay on at the pensione instead of roaming about . |
15 | I suppose I could carry on with the cataloguing , ’ she suggested . |
16 | I got free in the end , after being presented with a sprig of basil , and walked inland along the bluff until I could climb on to the ridge that led to Bourani . |
17 | ‘ I 'll give you a hand until the rush dies down and then I thought I 'd get on with the account orders for tomorrow , ’ she said casually , but the girl gave her a strange look , and Folly had a nasty feeling that her voice was n't as fully under control as she had thought . |
18 | I will not make use of the ransom theory in my retelling of the drama , but I shall cling on to the primitive belief , which I believe to be the correct biblical one , that God 's atonement in incarnation and cross was the crucial victory in the Great Battle not only over sin but also over the Devil and the powers of darkness . |
19 | ‘ I shall go on to the Saracen 's Head . ’ |
20 | I shall get on with the work and have a sweep out and tidy up , and I 'll have the fire lit and the bone broth on before she gets home . |
21 | ‘ I will go on to the senior slopes , but not because I have anything to prove — to you or anyone else . |
22 | ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) . |
23 | I will get on with the dining room . ’ |
24 | ‘ You must go on with the preparations as though you were alone . |
25 | You must hold on to the hurt . |
26 | She did n't think she could walk on to the catwalk twice ; once was going to take all the courage she had . |
27 | Now the choice was hers — she could stay on in the cottage for the weekend as planned , or she could cut her losses and head for home . |
28 | On gaining this award , he or she could go on to the National Certificate ( level I ) . |
29 | She could go on to the other station but she says I enjoy being in so much I use it . |
30 | Leith snapped angrily — and realised she could go on in the same vein until she was blue in the face and it still would n't dent him . |