Example sentences of "can [vb infin] on [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 On the return , you can stay on for a few nights in Copenhagen for just £39 per person per night .
2 Or , you can carry on up the narrow and beautiful Nive valley to the village of Esterençuby .
3 We want to give the children positive memories which they can draw on during the difficult times at home to build a better country .
4 If you 've been here long enough , you can move on to a progressive prison ; to a C cat , or even D cat .
5 Once you have an exact description of the job then you can move on to an accurate description of the ideal candidate to do it .
6 Now you can move on to the final stage of the diet .
7 When the back seat rail and stretcher are in place we can move on to the curved lower rail in the back .
8 The last I heard Trish was going to become a teacher , I mean I I we are supposed to be trying to think about whether we can have a sh a panel that we of people that we can call on for the short term crisis appointments or whatever , but
9 A detailed kinematic understanding is thus available and this can lead on to a comprehensive dynamic and performance analysis if so desired .
10 Linear search and scan , another Look and Think activity , can lead on to the visual scanning technique required in discriminating the different shapes of words and letters in a line of print .
11 History shows it can go on for a long time , as deficits and surpluses did during the golden age before the First World War .
12 I can go on for a few more days .
13 One can go on to a third group that I did not discuss , " all-ischaemic events " , including non-fatal and fatal reinfarction ; it includes the development of unstable angina , and revascularisation procedures .
14 After them , things can go on in the normal hopeless way .
15 Dyspnoea ; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation , a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep , a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck ; neck is very sensitive to touch .
16 Then stratigraphical nomenclature can be forgotten and we can get on with the real work of stratigraphy , which is correlation and interpretation .
17 The controls are pure joy , though you can be surprised at the ease with which g can pile on in a sixty-degree banked turn at 230 knots .
18 there will be several formats that we can agree on at a later date .
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