Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] on a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Sports officer Ian Gardiner said : ‘ We will be submitting a bid for funds to put on a new series of Champion Coaching based on the popularity of the last course .
2 Three identical aprons hung on a crooked coatstand .
3 His lips took on a wry slant .
4 His eyes took on a dreamy expression and by the time I had intoned " Archibald , Marshall , English , Mc Phail and Morton , " there was something near to a wistful smile on his lips .
5 The shops took on a new lease of life , the street-sellers , with their lemonade and nougat , ostrich feathers , mummy-beads and scarabs , carnations and roses , and the street-artists , with their boa-constrictors and baboons , took new heart , and the city in general resumed its normal manic rhythm .
6 It only took a little adaptation for many familiar songs to take on a new life and vigour , especially with the accompaniment of timbrels , clapping and dancing .
7 Crackers and flares take on a whole new meaning when you work for the Olefines business .
8 The police and the majority of defendants put on an arrogant front .
9 For some weeks their lives took on a settled pattern of difference .
10 Hedgerows take on an additional dimension on foggy days ; when the distant landscape is blotted out immediate surroundings assume a new prominence .
11 Pubs could become for her extensions of the office , places to put on a good show for the Yard , swilling pints of bitter with the lads to enhance her image .
12 The ‘ 89 needs to put on a little weight . ’
13 For some time before this heavy clouds had increased and in the west the sky had become a dense purplish-black , a range of mountainous cumulus against which the outlines of buildings took on a curious clarity and the trees stood out livid and sickly bright .
14 The corridors took on an eerie silence .
15 Grigorovich 's simplistic , ideological heroes took on a new dimension when danced with such dramatic appeal , with such virility , such fabulous jumps .
16 For the last few days she had seen them , not as her parents but as two hating individuals carrying on a private war behind screens .
17 Although his wife 's chintz chaircovers bring on a certain nausea whenever I am obliged to call . "
18 Because we earn no money for the bulk of our day 's work , buying things takes on a rich range of meanings .
19 As the formality of adoption receded into past history , leaving the same accumulation of problems , hope began to wane and problems took on a different perspective .
20 I was one of a group of army cadets taken on an adventurous training camp , at Newtonmore , to learn new skills .
21 With this method some structures take on a purple coloration while others take up the red counter-stain .
22 Researchers at Atlanta 's Emory University claim brides put on an extra 5lbs in the weeks before marriage .
23 And this has prompted one of the oldest museums to put on a special exhibition of sketches that have become collectors ' items .
24 In the flickering candlelight , the withered features took on a grotesque appearance .
25 When the mist comes down many areas like the Somerset Levels take on a sinister and unreal appearance
26 WATCH receptionist/telephonist Ann Sheppard at work for a few minutes and productivity levels take on a whole new dimension .
27 Railways , Spearman went on , had the power to break local strikes , as they had done in a recent coal strike in the United States , and the operating officers and freight-yard superintendents took on a military-style power .
28 For the next half hour the rehearsals took on a sudden lift and everyone began to dare to try things out without feeling foolish .
29 So her waking hours took on a new format .
30 These forums had been held before the move was considered to provide lines of communication between management and staff but , the company notes , these meetings took on a new usefulness when the relocation was announced .
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