Example sentences of "[vb infin] on in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | He will stay on in a consultancy role for a few months until his successor settles into the job . |
2 | She wondered if he 'd stay on in the motel business , or move out . |
3 | It was arranged that Hetty would stay on in the shop for a while , and Sarah would work from ten o'clock until three for the first few weeks . |
4 | Now the choice was hers — she could stay on in the cottage for the weekend as planned , or she could cut her losses and head for home . |
5 | School students will stay on in the few settlements that will be left and in schools in Cuba , West Africa and other countries . |
6 | Or should they hang on in the hope that these assets will soon be worth serious money ? |
7 | Back then , they did n't catch on in a big way . ’ |
8 | They may not catch on in the north-east ! |
9 | The 1896 discovery by Eduard Buchner ( 1860–1917 ) that fermentation could carry on in the absence of living cells seemed like the final nail in the coffin . |
10 | On behalf of all her fans , I would like to wish her the best of luck in 1992 and hope that she will carry on in the dedicated way she has in the past year or so . |
11 | They 're always the ones that are a bit more boisterous , whereas the older ones you have to physically carry on in the shop floor , the students do n't , and that 's what gives them a bad name . |
12 | This is not sad because the important part of humanity , its ability to respond emotionally , will carry on in the androids . |
13 | ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) . |
14 | ‘ Where did you decide on in the end ? |
15 | Once we have incorporated the Maastricht treaty into our law — presumably , as my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister said , in the first Session of the new Parliament — we must press on in the second half of 1992 , when we have the presidency of the Community , to set out more clearly our vision of a common European future . |
16 | Rufus had always heard that nothing can go on in a village without the gossips knowing . |
17 | No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning . |
18 | No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning . |
19 | At the time I was mucking out the byre stalls , and piling the manure on top of my big heap when I saw the lights go on in the house . |
20 | We 'll spend the night there , and then , if she 's recovered , we 'll go on in the morning through Lima to Tacna in the south of Peru . |
21 | Leith snapped angrily — and realised she could go on in the same vein until she was blue in the face and it still would n't dent him . |
22 | After them , things can go on in the normal hopeless way . |
23 | it 's so new to them that they 're bothering to cost it , but how did we go on in the older days ? |
24 | How do they go on in the senior school . |
25 | The only thing that makes it bearable is the irrational belief that somebody interesting will come on in a minute … |
26 | Dyspnoea ; they wake from sleep with a sense of suffocation , a sense of choking which can come on in the first sleep , a sense of strangulation when lying and especially when anything is around the neck ; neck is very sensitive to touch . |
27 | ‘ I 'm thinking of the sort of attitude that suggests the unemployed do too little to help themselves , that if only you have determination and drive you can get on in the world . ’ |
28 | She said she had n't been for a while and erm then she said they did n't really know , they wondered how she was gon na get on in the water . |
29 | How did you get on in the multi choice the other day ? |
30 | Mr Bestall , who took over in 1935 from May Tourtel , Rupert 's originator , died at the age of 93 , but Rupert will live on in the minds of generations of children , some of them now drawing their pensions . |