Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] on [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 And as everything slipped away she could only hold on to the thought that somehow her murderer knew who she was .
2 So I think for this run I 'd better press on with the book . ’
3 ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’
4 That 's reach a common understanding which reflects the realities of a relationship we enjoy at the present day so that we can all get on with the task of serving our members and forming a Labour government .
5 If that could be added that would achieve my objectives and we can all get on to the debate about V A T on .
6 ‘ Then you 'd better get on with the job quickly . ’
7 Mrs. Mott had better get on with the job of cancelling them .
8 Joan I think I 'd better box on with the webbing here love , I have n't got enough
9 I 'll bo I 'd better box on with the webbing on the back .
10 Tell her you know how she feels , but do n't give in to her demands , as she 'll soon latch on to the idea that throwing a tantrum gets her what she wants .
11 They 're always the ones that are a bit more boisterous , whereas the older ones you have to physically carry on in the shop floor , the students do n't , and that 's what gives them a bad name .
12 Now though I 've got to just get on with the rest of my life
13 ‘ People are n't allowing us to just get on with the job .
14 ‘ We have not got a lot of money and we have got to just get on with the job of trying to sort things out on the field .
15 ‘ We are not going to stop our style of play , we are a free-running side who want to score tries and even if we come unstuck against good sides with well-organised defences we will still keep on with the kind of game which we know pleases the fans . ’
16 On earlier models , the mylar sheet will always move on during the left to right row , whichever side the carriage was on when you started .
17 Indeed , both he and Valentine see the needs of teleworking providing additional momentum behind the delivery of solutions that would have an equally telling effect on the use of technology that would still go on inside the office .
18 If , as expected , Mr Papandreou also fails to form a government , the mandate will automatically pass on to the Communists .
19 Perhaps we could now move on to the question of Sir Conrad 's recent involvement in the club 's affairs ? ’
20 So , now we can really get on with the party .
21 But the upward pressure on prices will be dampened by the 70,000 repossessed properties and the large stock of inherited houses that will now come on to the market .
22 Even so , this is a shortened Session , and as we must wait until next year for the start of a fourth Conservative term in office , we must now get on with the measures contained in the Gracious Speech .
23 You can just about cling on to the periphery of things if you 're in Bristol , but once you 're past there forget it .
24 ‘ To keep Bones , would you rather go on with the competition ? ’
25 I says Richard would you not even go on to the tech and , or somewhere that you could get better on your drawing and he , he
26 He would even walk on into the Hollywood Hills , beyond any bus line , for the sake of a half-hour voice lesson .
27 As the pressures mounted , Lenin was forced to admit that ‘ an unskilled labourer or a cook can not immediately get on with the job of state administration ’ and that only a few thousand workers throughout Russia had any experience of work in government .
28 ‘ You will kindly get on to the telephone and call up your revolutionary children .
29 It will then move on to the Cleveland Museum of Art .
30 When you claim Income Support , the DHSS will also give you a Housing Benefit claim form , which they will then pass on to the council .
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