Example sentences of "be [verb] on [prep] some [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Talks have been going on for some time on a range of scientific matters including fusion , nuclear safety and the environment .
2 The process has been going on for some time .
3 My head was throbbing and the shoulder was beginning to ache from the kicking , which had probably been going on for some time before I came round .
4 The argument had been going on for some time .
5 The argument must have been going on for some time , although Lucien had been hardly aware of it .
6 One thing Mam said suggested it had been going on for some time
7 When questioned they admitted that this state of affairs had been going on for some time .
8 ‘ I do n't really think they have done enough this has been going on for some time .
9 Well you say that International Women 's Day has been going on for some time , but here in Britain what 's known as the Women 's Movement has been in operation now for about , what , twenty one/twenty two years , something like that .
10 However months later he was able to start talking about his wife and the fact that they had not been getting on for some time and had begun divorce proceedings .
11 He and Philip Burton conducted what could be looked on as some kind of elaborate courtship ritual which would result in his hurtling on to a world stage .
12 The focus on fragmentation as a problem suggested that it will be focused on in some detail .
13 But during this period , in order that the school 's reputation remain intact , he should be taken on in some capacity and paid a salary , that of a youth employment officer 's assistant , for example .
14 . We still have n't got a name for this er facility , been dragging on for some time .
15 However , the FoE did welcome a number of proposals they had been campaigning on for some time .
16 He thought it fortunate that improvements in male characteristics were passed on in some measure to women , otherwise the man would have become as superior in mental endowment to women as the peacock is in plumage to the peahen .
17 By 1719 , the buildings of both the house and the hall were rapidly falling into ruin and a storm of 1720 , blew parts of the hall to the ground , but a stone figure of Haymo blown from a niche over the door was undamaged , falling it is said on to some grass , this was later presented to the Bishop of Rochester .
18 In section 11.3 it was stressed that the Laplace transform of a signal is pertinent to practical situations in which the signal is switched on at some instant .
19 A corollary of this last point is that the technique is likely to succeed when the signal is switched on at some moment to which the time origin may be ascribed , the inference being that the signal is zero up to time .
20 She was carrying on with some lawyer . ’
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