Example sentences of "have [verb] [adv prt] on the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Danny has to go down on the floor , put his hands on hips and go , evening all ! |
2 | Gran has joined in on the act . |
3 | This does n't mean that ICL has given up on the Texas Instruments Inc Sparc line , simply that it can now pick and choose from the two superscalar implementations on offer , says Mike Coote . |
4 | Right if you have a look at what has come up on the screen , on the screen . |
5 | Unmistakably , though , he has come down on the side of the demonstrators and against Erich Honecker , the East German leader . |
6 | This remedy may come up after a Belladonna sore throat has gone down on the chest . |
7 | Hewlett-Packard Co has swung back on the offensive in the US with a predatory enhanced workstation trade-in programme , which it says accepts the broadest range of workstations , personal computers and X terminals in part exchange for new Precision Architecture RISC workstations and X stations . |
8 | That privilege , and the airs and presumption that went with it , are still resented ; and some of the resentment has rubbed off on the poet . |
9 | Simon Wigg has lined up on the starting grid in more world championships than most people have changed tyres . |
10 | In the end , he has lost out on the grounds of inferior physique . |
11 | I rushed him to hospital and the doctor asked how it was done and I said he 'd fallen over on the step . |
12 | Close-to and without their performance wigs , these two hardly seemed to connect with anyone that she 'd seen out on the stage less than an hour before ; then they 'd been all front , carnival vamps , not so much real human beings as fantasy figures with hidden human operators . |
13 | Mind , he 'd crashed in on the situation pretty damn quickly , stepping in and being nice to her almost before she had dried her eyes , trying to get her on the rebound . |
14 | When they 'd landed back on the plate , he leaned forward , studying the pattern they 'd formed . |
15 | Well I wondered if he 'd wa he 'd gone out on the Nottingham cos I wondered what would happen to the mascot was he shot the mascot , after the the game ? |
16 | I 'd gone out on the boat |
17 | Because my head landed on his teeth it hurt me more than if I 'd smacked down on the bridge of his nose . |
18 | By eschewing the obvious solution of a differential dividend payment , the group has had to fall back on the option of endowing the chemicals company with additional cash by way of a rights issue from Zeneca . |
19 | In one of those announcements that trigger a double take in observers who find it hard to believe the function had not been available for years , IBM Corp this week finally added Ethernet support for the 3174 cluster controller , long after most users must have given up on the idea and made other arrangements . |
20 | ‘ If men never considered the exchange rate in precisely those terms , ’ the man wrote , ‘ then the Caprice and the Ivy would have given up on the supper trade decades ago . ’ |
21 | Juan Sosa , former Panamanian ambassador in Washington , said that , if the US had been ‘ more active ’ , several battalions of wavering Panamanian troops would have joined in on the rebel side . |
22 | The reforms could also mean that the most experienced specialist officers , such as police divers , would have to go back on the beat . |
23 | ‘ I decided I was fed up with having to go out on the road all the time in order to pay a mortgage on a house I never spent any time in ! ’ he told me . |
24 | Well you 'll have to come in on the way ho |
25 | At the end of every chapter there 's a review of what you 've just learned and a few questions to check that it 's really sunk in ( and a mini glossary of any new terms/jargon you may have picked up on the way . |
26 | A tidy desk and behind it a man who might have come in on the Saturday afternoon for extra work . |
27 | If I could go back I think I would have come out on the Tour three years later . ’ |
28 | But England could have missed out on the youngster if he had chosen the country of his father 's birth . |
29 | On 11 November 1918 bells and cheers rang out all over France on Armistice morning , and Modigliani can not have missed out on the celebrations . |
30 | However , both Royal Scottish and the Bank , might have missed out on the business had it not been for quick-thinking Dave Chinchen , a Bank Officer at Southampton High Street Branch . |