Example sentences of "[vb base] on [verb] the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 You walk on to climb the slopes of Bulkeley Hill from where you head for the village of Bickerton and on the heathland of Bickerton Hill .
2 After it 's been dished out the paymasters ride on to take the pay to the men cutting down the forest .
3 Then explore Graigueconna , make a brief tour of Bushey Park House and gardens and hasten on to watch the sun beyond the grandiose setting of Powerscourt .
4 By exposing the process , Fan on opened the way to the sort of anti-essentialist understanding of racial categories that is the theme of this book .
5 Problematic as sexual difference may be , there is no alternative : we must , continues Kristeva , ‘ go on waging the war between the two races without respite , without a perverse denial of the abyss that marks sexual difference or a disillusioned mortification of the division ’ .
6 In the end , whether applicants have their experiential learning counted in the admissions process , or whether students go on expanding the degree of influence they exercise over the curriculum , will be up to them .
7 Please thank them all very much , and go on using the barn for as long as you like . ’
8 The team clockwise from top left , James Tromans , 17 , Anthony Jewitt , 17 , Jennifer McCaffery , 18 , and Katie Lane , 19 , won the County Durham final of the Young Consumer of the Year event , and go on to represent the county at the regional finals in Gateshead on April 7 .
9 However in our view although many judgments pay lip service to Lord Parker 's words they do , in fact , go on to examine the adequacy of consideration as relevant to the question of reasonableness .
10 It is not possible , however , to come to any conclusion about the usefulness of testing and inspection ( outsider evaluations ) without considering what is possible for schools to do themselves ( Becher et al , 1979 , go on to consider the merits of school-based approaches ) .
11 I then go on to discuss the idea of " independence of thought " and show why a metaphysical , as distinct from a " critical " , realism can not be coherently defended .
12 I go on whacking the side of my leg .
13 Mind , God knows why I keep on recording the children for posterity , the way they are now .
14 And I keep on forgetting the name of the group .
15 We focus first on the moral issues , and then move on to consider the debate over the factual consequences of insider dealing .
16 Both texts then seem to abandon the question of what Matroc 's competitors do and move on to consider the types of customer in the market place and whether the brochure would be of any value to them .
17 In this compartment , in this carriage , on this train , it does not happen and they move on to check the papers of the woman and her daughter .
18 In Webb we see once again the tendency of the House of Lords to begin with a discussion of the relevant national law and then move on to discuss the relevance of any Community law provisions .
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