Example sentences of "[vb pp] on [conj] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | By the end of the 1920's Miss Lintorn-Orman 's brand of Fascism had not caught on and the Bolshevik revolution in England , which it had been formed to combat , had ceased to be an event worth waiting for . |
2 | As the chief location of tin mining , conditions confirm that an abundance of cheap labour tended to stimulate industrial growth , although naturally mineral extraction has to be carried on where the workable reserves happen to be located , using imported labour if necessary , as , it would seem , was precisely what was done in Penwith . |
3 | Just gone on and a little bit left over . |
4 | If , for example , a client discloses to a solicitor , in confidence , the fact that a child is being abused by another person , this information can only be passed on if the public interest in protecting children from serious harm outweighs the public interest in maintaining confidentiality between solicitor and client . |
5 | Higher levels of language can not be started on until the syntactic processing is complete , since the relationships that they are concerned with are denoted by structural properties of the input . |
6 | This means that a decision must be taken on whether the in-use setting can be recreated in the studio or whether the photography should be done on location . |
7 | Two thousand more workers are expected to be taken on and the local economy should get a £100 million boost once production reaches capacity . |
8 | Two thousand more workers are expected to be taken on and the local economy should get a £100 million boost once production reaches capacity . |
9 | A key turned in the lock , the top light was switched on and the errant Carole stood on the threshold , her suitcase in hand . |
10 | Extra staff brought in to clear the backlog should be kept on until a thorough review is made . |