Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv] [verb] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Griffiths realized that this situation could not be changed overnight , so under the new regulations the NHS will still be allowed to carry on providing long-term care if it wishes .
2 Do you really want to carry on using that mug ?
3 Well the aspirin and the g The aspirin is essential and you 've got to carry on taking that .
4 It 'll be good because Daddy can live on one kidney and I 'll only have to carry on taking one drug .
5 They were happy to carry on taking each day as it came .
6 He explained : ‘ We were all reluctant to carry on delivering these lethal weapons .
7 erm Nonetheless , while we want to carry on supporting that , we 've also got to think , as Jack said , erm of as we enter the next century what is going to be right for our children , and we know that in many ways we have failed them and we know that we are producing many children who have n't had the training and the education that 's going to be necessary for us to be erm economically competent in the future , so we 've got to look at the whole of our educational provision , and frankly I think opting out was erm a sort of unnecessary blip on all of this that is n't really terribly important in the whole issue of how the children in this country should be educated .
8 Corporal punishment is already illegal in state schools following a previous Human Rights Court case , but today 's judgment leaves parents free to carry on choosing private sector schools where strict discipline is still the rule .
9 Fiona is planning to continue raising funds for charity in this way next year , so all overseas travellers are asked to carry on donating those small coins that the banks do n't want !
10 It will also decrease the likelihood of catching hardened computer criminals by turning informers into criminals , and allow computer manufacturers to carry on selling insecure computers for applications where they should not be used .
11 You would expect them to carry on doing that .
12 She has to decide whether she is prepared to carry on doing this .
13 ‘ Do n't like to see little 'uns ill . ’
14 Unemployment in eastern Germany is likely to go on rising this year .
15 At first , the payment entitled them to go on receiving food-subsidy coupons from the team , even though they were no longer working for it .
16 Of course , you will need to go on taking basic fire safety precautions even when smoke alarms are fitted in your home .
17 She could still hear the faint murmurs of Tom Russell and his sister talking on the veranda , and it distracted her from the real purpose of this time alone , which was not to go on reliving that moment when his hand had covered her own , but to obediently follow his suggestion of giving herself time to fully think this through .
18 Basically that argument was simply that the country could not afford to go on expanding non-productive sectors such as social services .
19 ‘ Because we need to clear the air , I think , if we 're to go on seeing each other . ’
20 He realised dimly that if he had volunteered to go on training all night his teachers would not have objected .
21 General obedience is taught by most of the Rottweiler clubs to new handlers as a public service exercise and this early training sometimes inspires people to go on to do greater things .
22 But my doctor was under the procession , oh yo you 've you 've plenty of time yet , you 've years to come because of all this idea of how much it was going to cost to go on to do other
23 It meant that all one had to do was to go on contacting enough people and one would make the necessary sales .
24 Other questions can also be introduced : how is it possible to go on forming such sentences for ever ?
25 It was n't easy , but she forced herself to go on meeting that blue gaze without flinching .
26 The Greenland fishermen will be allowed to go on catching 12 tons of salmon a year for subsistence purposes .
27 He offered Balcon 's Ealing Studios favourable distribution through his company 's domestic and foreign network , with ‘ independence as far as production was concerned ’ together with a licence to go on producing low-budget British films .
28 You who must decide whether you are prepared to go on allowing dangerous aggression to mar life for all of us .
29 to go on opening quiet flowers to the wind
30 By passing on his skills he has given other youngsters the incentive to go on to achieve greater things .
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