Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] on in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Living history approaches , allowing children to dress up and experience activities carried on in the past can be extremely successful in the primary school . |
2 | That will give us plenty to work on in the next decade , and that is probably as far as we should look for the time being . |
3 | Cords , white or beige , were worn early on in small numbers but in mid'71 black/bottle green/navy straight leg Levi cords caught on in a big way . |
4 | Orientalism lives on in the tourist 's gaze , says Nigel Whiteley |
5 | The roof goes on in a few tumultuous hours . |
6 | In addition to this , of course , there 's a good deal of energy research goes on in the campus , and erm there 's another unit which we call the Science Policy Research Unit . |
7 | Most of the Dialogues are about the kind of research carried on in the new laboratories which were becoming a feature of life by the 1870s . |
8 | England defenders Rob Jones and Mark Wright came on in a wholesale reshuffle of resources , but any danger that United would feed off the disruption was dismissed by McManaman 's leggy skills . |
9 | Sure enough , a light came on in the middle floor of the wing . |
10 | For three days , while Asmar lingered on in a Beirut hospital , Coleman stayed in the apartment and slept with a gun under his pillow . |
11 | Rocky came on in the 60th minute but could not affect the game . |
12 | Could you say a little bit more about the research going on in the Education Area ? |
13 | We had a business man on Question Time who was saying that five hundred million pound fraud going on in the benefits , right ? |
14 | A hard square of orange light sprang on in the darkness . |
15 | This , the biggest single enclave in Sussex , not only demonstrates the continued dependence of the prototype works at Newbridge on immigrant workmen , but also implies that there had been no great pool of indigenous labour to draw on in the first place . |
16 | And now , as they got back into the car , both men sat in silence as they watched the light switched on in the front bedroom — and then the curtains being drawn across . |
17 | The light went on in the hall and the door opened . |
18 | A light went on in the house opposite . |
19 | ‘ I saw Liza Carrow , ’ Eleanor went on in a matter-of-fact way . |
20 | And did you brothers stay on in the little cottage ? |
21 | Oh , I can read the signs as well as anyone , ’ Dora went on in a sudden surge of indignation as Melissa 's eyebrows lifted . |
22 | These two types of meaning are distinguished by the terms semantic meaning ( the fixed context-free meaning ) and pragmatic meaning ( the meaning which the words take on in a particular context , between particular people ) . |
23 | It seemed like only moments after Shiona had fallen asleep that the light snapped on in the compartment and a strong hand was dragging her from her bunk . |
24 | ‘ Real ’ work goes on in the ‘ real ’ world , which lies outside the gates of the school or college . |
25 | Yes , I think for a lot of people that 's true and I do n't denigrate that because I think a lot of good work goes on in the Women 's Institute , but what we are particularly interested in is in the professional craftsman , the craftsman who has trained for a number of year to produce extremely good work , and what we try to do is to make that work more available to the public in a number of ways . |
26 | I think it 's fairly obvious that a lot more suffering goes on in the name of love than the little happiness you can squeeze out of it . |
27 | The 112-bhp 1.6-litre engine lives on in the entry-level £10,298 Lantra GLSi . |
28 | Surely not all that protein synthesis going on in the absence of the inhibitor could be about learning and memory ; some other fundamental aspects of behaviour must be affected ? |
29 | ‘ I know from other work going on in the south of Shetland that 10 per cent of the residents there remain concerned about the possibility of major long-term health effects , ’ he said . |
30 | He 's got to fulfil all three roles , and the more managerial work going on in the office , the harder it is to find the time to do the work for the clients , which is what produces the fees . |