Example sentences of "[verb] on as a " in BNC.
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1 | When he got on as a substitute against Sweden he was first class ; in Albania he was one of our best players . ’ |
2 | But the car lived on as a classic . |
3 | The track goes on as a pleasant lane beyond Calf Holes , coming alongside a belt of trees on the left and arriving after a mile at the sixteenth-century Ling Gill Bridge , a modest structure with a tablet built into parapet giving the information that it was repaired in 1765 at the expense of the inhabitants of the West Riding . |
4 | Many of Stenhouse 's objections arise out of other people 's oversimplifications , and it is of course true that we know very little of what actually goes on as a result of our work with students . |
5 | He can stay on as a sort of pensioner up at Framwell . ’ |
6 | His departure is described as amicable and he will stay on as a consultant . |
7 | If only he had thought of recorking his wine after dégorgement , then the perfectly limpid sparkling wine he had managed to achieve for himself and , no doubt , passed on as a ‘ tip ’ to others , would have been available to everybody . |
8 | I confess I can not really see worm watching catching on as a mass pursuit with worm watcher clubs and organised field visits , but I did hear of an infants ' school where the worm has joined the tadpole as a creature for study . |
9 | And what started as a language-game had to go on as a lie , or a myth . |
10 | As a proper noun standing for the state of being modern it has never really caught on as a popular word in everyday speech . |
11 | Dummies have since caught on as a fashion accessory at raves , but whether the trend was sparked by the emergence of Ketamine , or whether it 's just a way to keep the burning under control , is lost to myth and drug folklore . |
12 | Nearly 100,000 TR6s were built over the next 7 years and 90% went to America , where it caught on as a winner on road and track . |
13 | Nearly 100,000 TR6s were built over the next 7 years and 90% went to America , where it caught on as a winner on road and track . |
14 | The " fast-track " procedure allowed any agreement reached by US negotiators to be subsequently voted on as a package [ see p. 37849 ] . |
15 | The General looks on as a cadet is singled out to deliver his orders to others from his platoon . |
16 | I was a European top salesman with er that company and then moved on as a franchise . |
17 | Can I make a suggestion rather than re-numbering all those , its going to be quite a long job , is that from what I can see at the moment there is no reason why that ca n't be added on as a last sentence to nine anyway , cause nine says you records the outcome of the enquiry , . |
18 | Solid waste is different : unless it is burned or buried at sea , it lingers on as a visible souvenir . |
19 | They had just simply and totally fallen out of love with each other , and like the devout Catholics they were , carried on as a pretence . |
20 | If Dire Straits had n't been so successful , would you have carried on as a circuit band , or would you have gone back to teaching or journalism ? |
21 | Articles 100 and 235 of the Treaty of Rome provide a mechanism whereby the amassment of power by the Community may be carried on as a continuous process . |
22 | This will be the case where they are brought under common control or ownership or when one of the enterprises ceases to be carried on as a result of an agreement between the enterprises to prevent competition . |
23 | Zeyer had come on as a defender to protect the score when Kaiserslautern levelled at 1–1 , but his role changed dramatically when Wednesday immediately hit back to make it 2–1 . |
24 | A Dessie Edgar corner was neatly side-footed home in 79 minutes by Victor Welch who had just come on as a sub . |
25 | Peter Foley , who had come on as a substitute struck the upright with a powerful drive , for the ball to rebound clear . |
26 | Injuries have hit the club , and coach Billy Lomax had to come on as a substitute midway through the second half . |
27 | Immortalized by the soldiery in the war of 1914–18 , Fred Karno 's Army lives on as a descriptor of chaotic organization . |
28 | It lives on as a reality which the poet seeks to ‘ revive within ’ him , to reconstruct the state of mind of the removed passion of the last four lines and the effortless delight of the first two stanzas . |
29 | She feels sorry for smokers — ‘ Nowadays , I think it is looked on as a sort of disability ’ . |
30 | It was probably effective the first time , but now it is looked on as a desperate move , a last ditch attempt to gain attention . |