Example sentences of "on [art] [noun sg] to [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Steve Cram , the Olympic 1500 metres silver medallist in 1984 , still has to launch a serious challenge for his place in the team but took another solid step on the road to Barcelona with an encouraging relay leg at Sheffield .
2 Dara fled back to Agra and set off on the road to Delhi without daring to face his father .
3 Drake ( left ) defeated Clark to set Royal Berkshire on the road to victory against David Lloyd 's Heston
4 Leonard Bernstein started on the road to fame in the early nineteen forties when he was assistant conductor with the New York Philharmonic at the age of just twenty five .
5 On the road to Bosnia with a lorry load of aid
6 He has been idolised by fictional characters from Dean Moriarty in Kerouac 's On the Road to Barley in Le Carre 's The Russia House , and he is one of only two people looked up to by Miles Davis .
7 Darren was helped on the road to stardom by the Hit and Miss Management Agency based in Norton .
8 It concludes by suggesting that the reforms are now at a critical stage but there are ways forward which could take us further on the road to Health for All , if we are prepared to take them .
9 Just outside Paguera on the road to Andraitx on Majorca 's picturesque West coast .
10 The painting reproduced opposite , prepared exclusively for this article by Maitre Eugène Lelièpvre , shows the emperor riding in the dormeuse on the road to Avesnes on 13 June 1815 — the last time that he rode in it .
11 Marc Girardelli is well on the road to recovery from last season 's internal injuries , with consistent top-three placings in slalom , giant slalom and Super-G .
12 Copper on the road to recovery in Spring 1990 .
13 Mark Hateley seemingly well on the road to recovery after picking up an injury against Hibs last Sunday .
14 In order for an exchange to become a recognised investment exchange , it must demonstrate to the SIB that , inter alia : ( a ) it has financial resources sufficient for the proper performance of its functions ; ( b ) that it has rules and practices which ensure that business conducted by means of its facilities is conducted in an orderly manner , affording proper protection to investors ; ( c ) it limits dealings on the exchange to investments in which there is a proper market ; ( d ) where relevant , issuers of investments dealt in on the exchange are required to comply with such obligations as will , so far as possible , afford to persons dealing in the investments proper information for determining their current value ; ( e ) it has its own arrangements for ensuring performance of transactions effected on the exchange or ensures their performance by means of services provided under clearing arrangements made by it with a recognised clearing house ; ( f ) it has ( or secures the provision on its behalf of ) satisfactory arrangements for recording the transaction effected on the exchange ; ( g ) it has adequate arrangements and resources for the effective monitoring and enforcement of compliance with its rules and any clearing arrangements made by it ; ( h ) it has effective arrangements for the investigation of complaints in respect of business transacted by means of its facilities ; and ( i ) it is able and willing to promote and maintain high standards of integrity and fair dealing in the carrying on of investment business and to co-operate by the sharing of information and otherwise with regulators .
15 It was on the journey to London on that cold January night that the Weston brothers overtook the Bristol Mail .
16 I was informed that a group of young teachers at one college were planning a boycott on the day to protests against their poor living conditions and low pay .
17 Oh , just one little notice I do have that erm several of us are going on Thursday to the , on the trip to Docklands by the erm erm Rotary Club of Sawbridgeworth erm I 'm told that there are still one or two odd seats if anybody wants to come at the last minute er , he does n't anticipate he 's going to erm fill them so even if , late Wednesday night you suddenly find you are available , by all means , contact and I 'm sure it can be arranged .
18 She put the telephone receiver down on the invitation to lunch with a quiet face , but an excited heart .
19 This plan was dependent on the restitution to Solvay of its formerly sequestered site ; an agreement on this has been reached see ( Chem .
20 RICHIE DIXON , the former Scotland ‘ B ’ coach who is a new national selector this season , and David Johnston , Watsonians ’ former international centre , will be Scotland 's coaches on the tour to Australia in May and June .
21 I was soon talking on the telephone to Engelberger in Danbury , Connecticut .
22 He 's been travelling up and down the country for over a quarter of a century watching the Clarets and he would n't dream of being anywhere else but on the coach to Brighton on Boxing Day .
23 Whether the subject is the Royals or Nazis , researchers are immediately on the phone to hordes of ‘ ordinary people ’ , inviting them into studios all over the country to spout forth .
24 The personification furnishes not only a necessary step on the way to judgments about particular people , but a plateau we can occupy to consider these judgments .
25 ‘ Besides , now that I do not have to stop on the way to Paris for lunch I can go later .
26 At the pier , shops sell batiks and woollens to the ferry travellers : families with packed cars and roof-racks ; men with sheepdogs on the way to trials at Mallaig ; bikers on some kind of round robin according to their luggage tags — ‘ Genève-Edinburgh-Brugge-Genève ’ .
27 ‘ Is your sister expecting you at a specific time ? ’ asked Penry when they were on the way to Haverfordwest at last .
28 These sentiments were echoed by Bourassa , who described himself as " very pleased with the results " of the new accord and suggested that Canada was now " on the way to stability after two years of uncertainty " .
29 Only when this phantasy is well on the way to realization as a practical mode of government does the citizen begin to notice that the state 's omnipresence means the total bureaucratization and control of life , that its omniscience dictates the need for total state surveillance , and that its omnipotence can only come about as a consequence of the total impotence of its subjects .
30 Then there was a great-great-grandmother Elizabeth Tallentire , who was Grandmother Bayles 's mother , who lived with her husband at a farm over at Holwick , which is a little way out of Baldersdale , on the way to Middleton in Teesdale .
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