Example sentences of "[verb] on at [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | They pay thousands and thousands for the Van Goghs and Modiglianis they 'd have spat on at the time they were painted . |
2 | The good thing about cruises is that you always have the ship 's staff to help you if you have a problem and there are always guided tours laid on at every port of call . |
3 | This is of flannel : the round part is plaited up to form the front , and a quilling of the bordering put on , a band of the same laid on at the back , and strings . ’ |
4 | Well , you could have put that scene he made on at a theatre in the West End and charged for tickets , I reckon . |
5 | ‘ And , you know , I have n't the faintest idea of what actually goes on at a baby farm . |
6 | That 's where all the official entertaining goes on at the regatta — just to give you an idea of the scale of it , they 'll be putting away 50,000 pints of Pimm 's , 6,000 bottles of champagne and 3,000 pounds of strawbnerries . |
7 | I 've never been able to find out what goes on at the ceremony , but , from what I 've heard , there is more to it than rolling up your trouser-leg . |
8 | I can see why nuns wear white when they take the veil , but when you think of the way everyone goes on at the prospect of the wedding night innocence is the last thing on anyone 's mind . ’ |
9 | Because they have been treated more as adults here , the contrast between this and ordinary school makes it sometimes difficult for them to return and adapt to being treated as children again , so it is obviously preferable for them to continue on at the unit . |
10 | It was agreed Somerville and McCrea would stay on at the apartment in case Quinn called in . |
11 | Yes and did you stay on at the hospital then ? |
12 | He had gained five distinctions in his Matriculation examinations and it had been decided that he would stay on at the College until he was eighteen to take Higher School Certificate . |
13 | It was at this moment that I decided I must learn to dance , so that I could stay on at the pensione instead of roaming about . |
14 | Idea now catching on at the double |
15 | Power stations , oil refineries , dairy farms , newspapers , hospitals , simply have to go on at the weekend , and often through nights as well as days . |
16 | Inside were two fairly small square rooms , one each side of the front door , with a roomy kitchen built on at the back . |
17 | They were the sorts of contacts that you have when you 're signing on at the Employment Benefits Office , when you 're going to a job interview erm and often these are very negative because the experience of signing on is n't a very pleasant experience at all ; most job interviews , unfortunately , end with a rejection erm so a lot of these non-routine contacts were quite negatives ones for people . |
18 | She 'd got the job after being made redundant and signing on at the job centre . |
19 | It was Ranald who explained , always keeping on at the massage . |
20 | It should be no more and no less than the business carried on at the time of completion . |
21 | With only three minutes remaining in their Sharwood 's Irish Senior Cup semi-final clash against Pegasus , Sinead , who had only come on at the start of the second-half , popped up to score the only goal of the game . |
22 | The unending toil , which ground on at the pace of the changing seasons and the constant struggle against relentless Nature would be in vain , as far as Jonadab Oaks was concerned , unless there were others of his name to follow in his footsteps and work this land to which he had devoted his life . |
23 | The draft timetable will have been decided on at the sale strategy stage and will be to an extent a function of the marketing process chosen . |
24 | hold on at the back , one question |
25 | They are woven from rather coarse flexible tubing , and are driven from a compressed-air supply that is strapped on at the waist . |
26 | Still they waited , as the Scots came on at a canter . |
27 | What do the journalists type on at the Post ? ’ |
28 | Similar voltage waveforms apply to windings B and C with an appropriate phase displacement , so that winding C , for example , is turned on at the mid-point of the winding freewheeling interval . |
29 | The foundry 's most famous loco was the Derwent of 1845 , which worked on the S&DR until the 1860s and soldiered on at a colliery until 1891 . |
30 | Two shows on at the moment can help to correct this . |