Example sentences of "[be] on [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Has to be on a runners on the side as well otherwise it would just fall down .
2 Within the Conservative party , aspiring candidates have to be on a candidates list maintained by the party 's national headquarters .
3 It can be on the plates in readiness , and then Jean and I will do the rest .
4 Those concerned about football hooliganism today idealize the stable post-war years when it was safe to be on the terraces and one could walk the streets at night .
5 ‘ They think he might be on the moors . ’
6 I think he was celebrating the coming of steam power , and showing the people of his time how much safer they were going to be on the seas , do n't you ? ’
7 The project looks at how risk and uncertainty are handled by the decision makers concerned and what the impact may be on the choices made .
8 will claim for it , and then , as under the old system that worked simply and cheaply , it will be on the records .
9 While it published scorching critiques of the diplomacy that had led Britain into war , MacDonald insisted that ‘ whatever our views may be on the origins of the war , we must go through with it . ’
10 However , despite the publicity given to the more extravagant claims about the impact of new technology on the level of unemployment , and the popular notion that the silicon chip is a job destroyer , a survey , published in 1979 , of some 400 documents on the effect of the new information technologies on employment showed ‘ how little foundation there is to existing studies , half of which are by pessimists ( often with a trade union background ) and the other half by optimists ( who tend to be on the employers ’ side ) ’ ( Institute for Research on Public Policy 1979 ) .
11 A main focus should be on the differences between written and spoken English .
12 But no one knows what the biological effects would be on the astronauts undertaking such a trip Christopher Joyce
13 But no one knows what the biological effects would be on the astronauts undertaking such a trip
14 The force need not be applied on the victim 's body : it can be on the clothes he is wearing : Day ( 1845 ) 173 ER 1042 .
15 The main emphasis will be on the determinants of competitiveness and trade performance and how this in turn affects the demand for labour by industry .
16 Those who depend entirely for their income on the state pension and means-tested income support benefits are likely to be on the fringes of unacceptable poverty unless the level of benefits is increased .
17 an Article 85-type prohibition of anticompetitive agreements , including an illustrative , but not exhaustive , list of banned practices such as price fixing , collusive tendering , resale price maintenance ( RPM ) , market sharing , and collective boycotts : the focus of the prohibition is to be on the effects of agreements rather than the specific form that they take ;
18 Because really in my view it should be that once something like this happened then it should be on the owners to prove they have n't been negligent .
19 er , so , with that er he never ought to be on the buses , I mean he old Bernard Manning and Charlie what was that , his name , Charlie what ?
20 Piotr Skubiszewski 's forthcoming contribution to the series ‘ Storia Universale dell'Arte ’ , the volumes on Western civilisation edited by Enrico Castelnuovo , will not be on the shelves until 1993 .
21 When going into a supermarket to buy cabbages , onions , carrots or eggs , just give a little thought as to how these came to be on the shelves — the early planting and worrying about frosts , packing and carting to the shops .
22 Retailers with power will , perhaps less commonly , use it to invoke restraints such as slotting allowances for the right of a manufacturer 's product to be on the shelves of a supermarket .
23 1 SCIENCE MUSEUM : Interview with James Goddard : he has to leave at 9.00 for Heathrow but will be on the premises from 0630 onwards .
24 Before issuing a warrant the magistrate must be satisfied that : ( a ) the material is likely to be on the premises .
25 He must be on the premises lawfully , either by virtue of a warrant , under statutory authority or by consent .
26 Similarly , if runners-up win substantial prizes , arrange where possible for the handover to be on the premises of a local supplier .
27 Since s. 2(2) OLA 1957 requires the occupier to take such care as is reasonable to see that visitors will be reasonably safe in using the premises for the purposes for which they are invited or permitted by the occupier to be there , lawful visitors will be owed a duty only in so far as they remain within the scope of their invitation or permission to be on the premises .
28 Hence people who enter the premises as lawful visitors may not remain so if they step outside of their invitation or permission to be on the premises .
29 Accordingly , at the time of the accident the deceased was a lawful visitor on the premises , since the brewery had not given the deceased any indication that the permission they had given him to be on the premises expired at 10.30 p.m .
30 Although we have discussed the duty of an occupier to lawful visitors in relation to guests and customers , the duty is also owed to employees and other people such as tradespeople who have a legitimate purpose , and thus an implied permission to be on the premises .
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