Example sentences of "[adv] on to [noun sg] " in BNC.
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31 | The survivors I have interviewed mostly remembered going straight on to piece-work and staying there , although in larger offices , like Clark 's , some experienced Women workers did become stab hands . |
32 | Yes , just go straight on to policy and resources , we we have to take it with the main motion , I mean if it 's passed it 's a s standing motion . |
33 | Rather than go straight on to drama college , she decided to take a year out to travel . |
34 | I was just , I mean did they really believe that it would , it would just lead straight on to socialism ? |
35 | ‘ I am going over to Stone later on to change our Mother 's accumulator . |
36 | If the level is low , your doctor may give you iron tablets , and run another blood test later on to check their effectiveness . |
37 | In residential environments where boundary enforcement is strong , adolescents may be tempted into boundary-transgressing behaviour which may well generalise later on to drug/alcohol seeking behaviour . |
38 | In this first offensive act , what one wants is to inflict such casualties on the enemy that it will be possible later on to attack in depth , at certain chosen points , with superiority . |
39 | Just after passing level with house ( visible away to left ) , avoid stone bridge on left leading to iron gates but fork left 20 yds later on to path which crosses stream and follows it then reaches road . |
40 | The race is now on to show that the Government is wrong before the last bird in the UK is slaughtered . |
41 | The race is now on to fund what would be a major buy for the museum . |
42 | ‘ I ca n't not serve him , ’ she said as she moved around the counter and back on to home territory . |
43 | to get to three and then back on to teletext |
44 | He was fatigued even before the start of the fourth game when he was late back on to court . |
45 | Panama thrusts Third World back on to centre stage Notebook . |
46 | What is most interesting , however , is that after a long famine , Latin America and its political and economic uncertainties have been thrust back on to centre stage . |
47 | These values and this separation of course react back on to design practice itself ; after all practice models itself on conceptions of what , theoretically , it is . |
48 | But eventually he , he , he again when time we started and then he moved on to it , back on to declaration of intent , and they pulled him up and took . |
49 | After lunch going progressively easier , went back on to piste , sandy but rocky at bottom of tyre-tracks . |
50 | Folly forced her mind back on to business . |
51 | Stepping out on to grass she turned and knew that she was one of the few in all history and legend who could safely look a dragon in the eye . |
52 | The headmaster gestured towards the window , still uncurtained , but giving out on to pitch blackness . |
53 | They 're on the ground floor , and they look out on to college land . |
54 | Reacting against the momentary quality of Impressionism , which had been like a window suddenly opened out on to nature from a sheltered interior , against all forms of violent personal expression , against the decorative and symbolic element which had characterized the work of the Nabis and Gauguin and so much late nineteenth-century painting , and even against the Fauves ( and the strong fin de siècle flavour of Fauvism has never been sufficiently acknowledged or stressed ) , the Cubists saw their paintings as constructed objects having their own independent existence , as small , self-contained worlds , not reflecting the outside world but recreating it in a completely new form . |
55 | Turn out on to wire rack . |
56 | The primary radar return from the aircraft faded as it turned left on to base leg at 1229:16 hrs . |
57 | They turned left on to Sunset and her mother put the roof of the car up again without any argument . |
58 | I 'm determined from here on to take things into my own hands . ’ |
59 | BBC Radio 1 is the most influential radio station in Britain and it is every plugger 's dream to get their records regularly on to Radio 1 's ‘ A ’ list . |
60 | Gastric acid was collected continuously on to ice and the acid output during each 15 minute period was measured by titration to pH 7 with 0.1M NaOH . |