Example sentences of "to set [adv] on [art] " in BNC.

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1 And it was able to set off on a totally different , and more professional , tack .
2 He now travelled in disguise from St Malo on 18 December 1715 , to Dunkirk , from where , after a six-week wait , he was at last able to set off on a small eight-gun 200-tonner , for Scotland .
3 Well , it happened that Maureen and Aubrey were about to set off on a round-Britain motoring holiday .
4 Fresh from the indulgence of driving the fastest and most powerful Jaguar saloon ever built over several hundred kilometres of demanding roads , I was about to set off on a journey that would take me from one end of Europe to the other .
5 ‘ Guv'nor says you 're to set off on the side nearest him , ’ Bob said briefly .
6 The Vimy was constructed on February 13 , it was No 13 of the batch , the Vickers crew numbered 13 , the Vimy reached Newfoundland on May 26 ( twice 13 ) , Jack arrived in Newfoundland on May 13 , and because 13 was lucky to him Jack wanted to set off on the attempt on June 13 .
7 It was time for News on Sunday to set off on the trail of the people and organizations who had theorized about the prospects for a popular left-wing newspaper for so long .
8 They would expect to learn of the success of the Tay landings , and to set off on the seven miles that would take them to the central strongholds of Alba , already besieged by their fellows .
9 She had built up a good little business in the indoor market-hall and now she and George had amassed enough in the bank to set up on a farm of their own .
10 For an artist to travel is to set out on a visual adventure which may or may not end in fulfilment .
11 It had been so vivid it seemed real , yet had she really been idiot enough to set out on a rough sea in a mere dinghy ?
12 You are about to set out on an interesting and formative experience , something that is likely to have a major impact on your life .
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