Example sentences of "[adv] go on [to-vb] the " in BNC.

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1 Palmer was looking to equal that — and perhaps go on to take the US PGA Championship too , the golden grand slam .
2 The safest way to proceed with a project that uses any unusual components is to buy these components first , and to only go on to buy the remaining components once you actually have the ‘ hard to find ’ items in your possession .
3 This enabled me to put in all the words I consider legal and thus go on to win the game .
4 This enabled me to put in all the words I consider legal and thus go on to win the game .
5 It would seem that there is a demand for such assistance as 1 in 5 of all applicants said that they did not go on to take the course because of financial difficulties .
6 She did not go on to express the next thought in her mind : thank goodness Annabel was going away to school , and very soon the association would be closed , for its continuance would create an impossible situation .
7 Yet in practice this view was not extended to take in the case of gender : the advances made as a result of the critique of behaviourism and pluralism did not go on to question the assumptions and mechanisms that continue to define politics as the affair of men .
8 This is because the revolution in East Germany after 1945 changed the structures of power and ownership — but did not go on to change the structure of social relationships .
9 I swooped it so that on each pass it caught the top of the dam wall with one corner , gradually producing a nick in the sand barrier which the water was able to flow through , quickly going on to overwhelm the whole dam and the sand-house village beneath .
10 A national NUJ official says it 's a major achievement , but insists that the fight will still go on to get the sacked journalists their jobs back.Nick Clark reports .
11 Final touches for a midnight special performance by make-up lady Barbara Daley — the lady who later went on to do the make-up for Lady Diana on her wedding day .
12 His son Benjamin Lee ( 1798–1868 ) whose interest in politics and public life was rewarded when he became Lord Mayor of Dublin , later went on to represent the city as a Member of Parliament .
13 This then later went on to become the Farnborough ramp .
14 A wide-ranging review ( dread words ) is now going on to resolve the conflicts .
15 Now go on to learn the other letters .
16 We now go on to discuss the three aspects of analysis listed above .
17 We now go on to consider the rather more difficult cases of fall-rise and rise-fall tones .
18 Their insistence on selling only complete packages made the cost of buying the guides too expensive , but at the same time individual purchasing libraries have often gone on to modify the guides for local use ; and this is the greatest block to co-ordinated and centralized production — librarians prefer to prepare their own guides , tailor-made for their particular local needs .
19 They did not all give up there and then , but presumably went on to take the test again and eventually to pass — many of them at the second attempt .
20 Hero McCullough even went on to take the third round in his victory over the tough Cuban Joel Casamayor .
21 They do n't go on to explore the other stitches that their machine can do .
22 But it then goes on to criticise the Draft Directive because it ‘ fails to recognise that a different mix of measures including water treatment or blending may be required depending on local factors , such as geology , rainfall and farming practice . ’
23 He then goes on to ask the same question about people with extraordinary talents , whether in physics , generalship or painting .
24 He then goes on to fit the tenons to the mortise saying ‘ fit the stretchers to the posts and repeat the exercise on the mullions . ’
25 There is a ‘ loop ’ ( ( 5 ) d-(5)f ) while the listener establishes the siting of the aerial but having established the options the speaker then goes on to indicate the next step of the route — ( ( 5 ) i ) .
26 The roll that is quoted above records the election of officers for the coming year and then goes on to note the making of by-laws and the fining of defaulters .
27 Todorov then goes on to establish the primary categories of his narrative grammar , and they are proper noun , adjective and verb .
28 Indeed , Williams then goes on to discuss the propriety of treating children against the wishes of their parents , and states that ‘ the legal authority for this rests on the doctrine of necessity . ’
29 But then goes on to discuss the matter purely in electoral terms .
30 Because then the P P G seven then goes on to make the implicit point about other things that in the countryside such as the small villages and towns and other development opportunities , do occur which provide the rural diversification and employment development that is that is required by the P P G.
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