Example sentences of "taking [adv prt] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Such a decision would , of course , require the acceptance of the State taking on the responsibility ( and its cost ) . |
2 | But now it appears thieves are being increasingly interested in taking on the hole in the wall and that means bigger and heavier vehicles to do it . |
3 | The people bounding around the room appeared to be transforming , taking on the shape and form of the animal masks they were wearing . |
4 | Taking on the rest of them . |
5 | Taylor is obviously full of anticipation as he embarks on the most important year since taking on the England job . |
6 | Taking on the title role originally created by Michael Crawford in the Seventies , Jonathon opens at the Opera House in Manchester in September as Billy . |
7 | A syndrome — which was to recur again and again , from ABC to Age of Chance — of indie bands lashing other indie bands for their defeatism in not taking on the mainstream , was inaugurated . |
8 | Clause 4.2 of Precedent 1 deals with the matter by not taking on the obligation to deliver to a specific date in the first place . |
9 | The hurricane would never blow itself out ; and at its eye was a figure already taking on the lineaments of a familiar enough twentieth-century ‘ type ’ , the male-dominated , passion-ridden female so well-known to the readers of the novels of Barbara Cartland . |
10 | If you are not putting the proper bodywork on the ball which is coming towards you and which you are taking on the rise , then you wo n't have the control . |
11 | Such was the confidence of the little girl they used to call ‘ Shorty ’ at school that she was now considering taking on the might of the English legal system . |
12 | Jazz FM , Kiss FM and LBC are taking on the might of London station Capital Radio by selling their airtime in one package . |
13 | I 'm taking on the question of violence , this most difficult question . |
14 | In the year 1990–91 , Innovation 's Franklin business was worth £1.2 million out of their total turnover of £4 million and since taking on the distributorship in 1987 they claim to have sold close to 300,000 units of Franklin product . |
15 | Then taking on the Goliaths is possible . ’ |
16 | Taking on the Runcorn betting shop cashier is Charlton 's Steve Gritt who gets a 20-metre start . |
17 | In this sense , the modern humanities were taking on the mantle worn by classics in earlier centuries , as a central cultural frame of reference . |
18 | He has set himself up as a left-wing leader taking on the Government , ’ Mr Clarke said . |
19 | Bowled over … the girls taking on the boys at their own game . |
20 | Their skin taking on the pallor of death , is the same colour as the linen sheets . |
21 | This provides a classic instance of a president taking on the legislature in the most important of policy areas and succeeding in imposing his will . |
22 | Taking on the presidency at a low point in Italian political life ( his predecessor , Giovanni Leone , had resigned over the Lockheed scandal , and Prime Minister Aldo Moro had recently been assassinated by the Red Brigades — see pp. 29053-55 ) , Pertini was credited with restoring the country 's confidence and self-respect . |
23 | The affair , dubbed Baftagate by members of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts , is taking on the dimensions of a drama itself . |
24 | The affair , dubbed Baftagate by members of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts , is taking on the dimensions of a drama itself . |
25 | With many sexually active before their sixteenth birthday and with drug taking on the increase , education needs to start young . |
26 | Courageous in taking on the over-spending bogey that did such havoc in 1987 , it nevertheless opened the floodgates to a fortnight of ‘ we can give away more tax than you ’ , and exchanges between the two parties of a staggering triviality that effectively supplanted any wider debate about the economy . |
27 | Now a podgy , desperately unfit bar-fly , he simply was n't up to taking on the Man of Action role that he craved . |
28 | Not that I regretted taking on the responsibilities , but it meant shelving any dreams I 'd had . ’ |
29 | Passey and Melosh suggest taking on the basis of their investigations of crater fields . |
30 | Cricket now … the amateur players of the Minor Counties have been taking on the game 's elite in the first round of the Nat West Trophy . |