Example sentences of "they [verb] their [noun sg] on the " in BNC.

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1 For this reason , many landowners have followed the Junker path , taking over the land of sharecroppers and colonos and compelling them to sell their labour on the open market .
2 They made their fire on the sand and danced round it .
3 If they lose their hold on the rock or are swept away by the waves , they will assuredly drown .
4 They base their prognosis on the aggressive new product development and marketing that has been Cadbury 's hallmark in recent years .
5 First , I accept that the inspectors ' production of an annual report and other reports on our schools is extremely valuable , as they base their advice on the inspections that they carry out .
6 Usually they concentrated their attention on the roof .
7 Instead , they focus their attention on the negative behaviours they do not want .
8 Proprietors do appoint editors and chief-executives ; they decide budgets and manning levels and they put their imprint on the total organizations .
9 They ate their meal on the tiny porch , watching the moon rise and send out dancing streaks of light upon the constant motion of the sea .
10 They based their claim on the Italian translation , but the Amharic version which Menelik had signed did not confirm this , and no agreement was reached .
11 The Communist Party wrote to the National Executive of the Labour Party on 25 November applying for affiliation ; they based their claim on the federal nature of the labour movement and the help which Communists had given to Labour candidates .
12 As the headmaster gave the Husayn twins what he called ‘ the cork-screw ’ — an intense stare combined with a slow quiver of the nostrils — they slackened their hold on the new recruit to Class 1 — a Bosnian refugee whose name no one could pronounce .
13 And then of course they exercise their discretion on the actual facts of the case when fixing the sentence .
14 It is the way they keep their finger on the pulse and keep in touch with their audience .
15 Like a club side whose name seems to be on a cup , they had their name on the ticket to the U.S. ’
16 The ‘ temptations ’ of the jazz era in London 's West End , especially to Cup finalists , were a real danger , and Chapman constantly reminded his players that ‘ they only count as long as they retain their form on the field ’ .
17 Cities spend an enormous amount of money on building stadiums and bidding competitively for sports franchises ; they predicate their enthusiasm on the assumption ( for which there is no empirical basis ) that a professional sports team enhances a local economy .
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