Example sentences of "[to-vb] on from [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Unlike Schleiermacher , Hegel had a large number of followers who sought to carry on from the point he had reached . |
2 | Some members of the European Community are anxious to hurry on from the ERM to Economic and Monetary Union . |
3 | As Hassan 's comment half-implies , it may in some areas be time for criticism to move on from the task of defining postmodernism in relation to its antecedents . |
4 | He is beginning to move on from the subjects which have dominated the last couple of years , feeling that he has gleaned all the experience he can from them . |
5 | At least for representing ideas , it is necessary to move on from the classical models to the semantic models because the required emphasis is on capability , expressiveness and abstraction . |
6 | At a conference in Munich , Germany , on Nov. 18-20 ministers from the 13 member countries of the European Space Agency ( ESA ) decided not to move on from the research to the development phase of the key Hermes spacecraft and the Columbus space laboratory projects . |
7 | Has a lot to prove this term , after a poor season Has to move on from the promising youngster stage . |
8 | A defence agent said Frost and his friends had intended to move on from the lay-by , opposite Invermoriston Post Office , as soon as they got their Giro cheques . |
9 | Another late novella to follow on from A Theft ( published earlier this year ) , offering similarly refined pleasures in its account of Jewish suffering and success . |
10 | The article as a whole is strangely lopsided but seems to follow on from the logic of this position , embodying the agreement made between clergy and politicians towards the end of the nineteenth century outlined in Chapter 3 . |
11 | We have planned the desserts to follow on from the evening meal , as after the main meal we often like to have something sweet to eat . |