Example sentences of "[vb -s] on to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It goes on to Culworth , where it meets Banbury Lane , and may have proceeded along this Lane to the great markets of Northampton , where the cattle were sold in large numbers for fattening on the rich Midland pastures .
2 The Pope goes on to Mauritius on Saturday .
3 ‘ The one from Mainz goes on to Rome .
4 A major work in the field remains A Dictionary of British Surnames by P.H. Reaney , in which the relevant entry reads , ‘ Fursey , Fussey , Fuzzey , Forsey ’ , and goes on to instance John Forshay 1431 ( Dorset ) and Roger Fursey 1583 ( Surrey ) .
5 But Roxy er Roxy that was from his new C D Midnight Postcards and er he 's going to be at Nottingham 's Theatre Royal March the twenty eighth next year in Alfie , coming well ahead of it to tell us about it , and that 's going to be a blockbuster I think next year , and then goes on to Los Angeles .
6 I took the mid-afternoon express to Valladolid that goes on to Salamanca .
7 Erm , the proposals there do , in fact , exceed the capital spend on new starts , and it will therefore need pruning erm , and the proposals that we suggested earlier was that , subject to any comments members may have on individual schemes that are here , and their views on them , we would propose looking at the programme in detail , and bringing it within the guideline figures that have been set , erm , and doing that with the advice of P A G before it goes on to Policy Panel and , and Policy and Resources Committee .
8 Crossing the road it follows a path across country to a small road leading to Ballagh Cross and goes on to Armagh Manor .
9 She goes on to Glasgow , London and Peterborough .
10 How was it The next section goes on to analysis section three I think .
11 Set in Alaska , it stars the Canadian folk-singer k. d. lang as Kotz , an orphaned Eskimo of ambiguous sexual identity and brooding potential violence , who latches on to Roswitha ( Rosel Zech ) , a middle-aged German emigree librarian still hanging on to memories of lost happiness like the jars of preserved berries she keeps in her bedroom .
12 However , a second marginal comment in his New Testament both latches on to Crime and Punishment and provokes a backward thought .
13 and then Jasmine Flowers is in the corner , and then the salon is just at er it joins on to Jasmine Flowers .
14 ‘ Final income ’ adds on to income after taxes the value of benefits provided by the state which are not given in cash , for example medical care and education .
15 The route begins at the bonny little village of West Burton , climbs on to Penhill and then descends by drove road and field path to the ruined Crusaders ' chapel , returning at last by leafy lanes to the village .
16 Which , taken at the flood , leads on to fortune ’ ,
17 ‘ There is a tide in the affairs of men which , taken at the flood , leads on to fortune . ’
18 From Harrop Tarn the packhorse route leads on to Blea Tarn ( 1.5 miles ) and then down to the small hamlet of Watendlath ( 2 miles ) , situated at the end of a narrow valley next to a small tarn .
19 The first line begins with the man who has justly been termed ‘ the father of modern theology ’ , Friedrich D. E. Schleiermacher ( 1768–1834 ) , who was Professor of Theology in Berlin from 1809 ; and leads on to Albrecht Ritschl ( 1822–89 ) , Professor in Göttingen from 1864 , and those who under his influence formed the school of what is now generally known as Liberal Theology .
20 On the science of botany he comments that ‘ the lucid order and systematical arrangement of plants was not fully completed until a very recent period , when a Swede first gave lessons and then laws in this interesting science. , This reference to Linnaeus leads on to exchange between Chelsea and Europe .
21 The chewy nature of our beef teriyaki leads on to Denice 's dislike of beef , which in turn inspires her to do an extremely convincing impersonation of a fish , which leads her to mention that her mother 's name is Wanda .
22 When the Greeks begin to use it , it is also part of their interest in mastering the appearance of nature , and leads on to perspective and chiaroscuro , to European painting .
23 In it reconnaissance leads on to strategy and related tactics ; there is management of logistics and intelligence , of time as well as of forces ; planning is constantly updated by observation and reporting ; field actions have their own integrity , but are kept in tune with the master plan .
24 This leads on to politics .
25 However , as we saw , this type of personality hangs on to others , looking to them for affirmation and praise .
26 Edwards hangs on to shares and control of United .
27 The destructive sadist might well be thought to have an essential self-hatred , even a death-wish which he or she projects on to others in the infliction of damage .
28 ‘ ( 1 ) Where livestock belonging to any person strays on to land in the ownership or occupation of another and — ( a ) damage is done by the livestock to the land or to any property on it which is in the ownership or possession of the other person ; or ( b ) any expenses are reasonably incurred by that other person in keeping the livestock while it can not be restored to the person to whom it belongs or while it is detained in pursuance of section 7 of [ the ] Act , or in ascertaining to whom it belongs ; the person to whom the livestock belongs is liable for the damage or expenses , except as otherwise provided by [ the ] Act . ’
29 there 's no danger of fluid leaks on to hands or clothes .
30 From there we turned right to ride up the hill towards Lastingham , over the bottom of the wild moor that backs on to Rosedale .
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