Example sentences of "[adv] on to [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The child struggled gamely on to page two but Seemed to suspect that , after a page turn of this quality , anything else was liable to be an anti-climax .
2 The sun , incandescent orange , dropped slowly on to pier 56 and made the buttes of mid-town Manhattan shine like fool 's gold .
3 Do not make the mistake of putting the two sets of shoulder stitches back to working position and running the whole lot together on to waste yarn as this can be a nuisance when you need to unravel parts of the waste yarn while you join the shoulders together .
4 LIZ McCOLGAN pulled clear of the field early on to clock an impressive victory in yesterday 's Tokyo women 's marathon .
5 Both Doherty and Stephen Beatty fired in decent crosses early on to test the Tbilisi keeper and then Johnston almost get on the end of a long punt upfield by Dornan .
6 My decision early on to build site-specific works in steel took me out of the traditional studio .
7 We also decided early on to try to run a non-political agency , and that started with ourselves …
8 So they only had two hours further on to go from The Two Mills then to Hollyhead basically .
9 In its place , service stations were to be required to install vapour traps directly on to petrol pumps .
10 All wood floors suitable for d-i-y installation can be laid directly on to floor boards or concrete floors , assuming that they are level and , in the case of concrete , that there is a damp-proof course to stop any damp from reaching the floor .
11 Computer graphics can produce an image in a variety of ways , on a video screen , for example , or directly on to film .
12 Descent : Routes on the left half of the cliff join a terrace which leads easily left to the broad descent rake known as Ledge Route ; those on the right lead to the top of the buttress and directly on to Ledge Route .
13 We soon discovered the reason why — the floorboards had been laid directly on to earth . ’
14 Painting food colour directly on to icing and marzipan instead of kneading it in has a number of advantages .
15 The reader may prefer to move directly on to Section 3 ‘ The OED and the Future ’ .
16 ‘ I 'll be going straight on to Midnight Mass , ’ Oscar said .
17 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 .
18 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 .
19 Rather than go straight on to drama college , she decided to take a year out to travel .
20 I was just , I mean did they really believe that it would , it would just lead straight on to socialism ?
21 ‘ I am going over to Stone later on to change our Mother 's accumulator .
22 If the level is low , your doctor may give you iron tablets , and run another blood test later on to check their effectiveness .
23 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 .
24 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 .
25 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 .
26 The race is now on to show that the Government is wrong before the last bird in the UK is slaughtered .
27 The race is now on to fund what would be a major buy for the museum .
28 The primary radar return from the aircraft faded as it turned left on to base leg at 1229:16 hrs .
29 They turned left on to Sunset and her mother put the roof of the car up again without any argument .
30 I 'm determined from here on to take things into my own hands . ’
  Next page