Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] on to the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She added : ‘ When he eventually got on to the train he left the bird on a seat next to his cabin .
2 This in effect meant that PFF actually did 45 sorties , but please to remember that few Pathfinder aircrew elected to opt out at the 45 mark and most carried on to the magic 60 , And further take note that over 100 PFF aircrew managed the ton ( 100 sorties ) .
3 An hour later she was still happily chatting to the woman , finding out about the terrible Harry who had ‘ torn the heart ’ right out of her daughter and gone off with a woman from Cork , which naturally led on to the dreadful and often incomprehensible ways of men and the stupid way women always put up with it .
4 He could see in a three hundred and sixty degree sphere via the pod sensor modules , just as he could feel the ambient temperature , and even smell the lubricant that someone had carelessly leaked on to the floor .
5 Very soon , they eat enough to pass on to the next stage of their life cycle .
6 This obviously adds on to the cost of your basic computer but if you are a small business it is n't an enormous amount .
7 A gold ring from the port of Mochlos shows a goddess sailing on a boat with a shrine apparently built on to the afterdeck conveying a portable shrine from one coastal site to another .
8 Imagine that you can hear the waves gently lapping on to the soft sand .
9 Unlike the varied operations and sequences of the unique ‘ one-off ’ products of jobbing production , the products of batch production are dealt with systematically in lots , or batches , only moving on to the next operation , when each lot has been machined or processed in the current operation .
10 Well , what we did was we what we did was we erm found the alarm system to try and calculate some reasonable output rates erm but what we found was the output rates seemed incredibly low using based on the completion that they have got So what we was we erm took the nine week 's work that they 'd done and erm plus they 'd obviously based our output rates on that erm just for a little example , using the allowances we have n't got whereas actually we 'd been calculating it on what they had n't worked so , that was basically what we So moving on to the actual short-term programme
11 In total therefore there are seven times as many graduate men among all employees , so getting on to the wage profiles that grow fastest and last longest is very much a matter of educational credentials .
12 there and perhaps coming on to the Residents ' Association point that made in their proof , that our forecasts actually show that on balance , er er there would be an increase in flow in fact on the on that route as it approaches the A sixty one .
13 Yet the substance had only gone on to the Jockey Club 's list of prohibited substances a mere ten months before Aliysa failed her dope test .
14 And as everything slipped away she could only hold on to the thought that somehow her murderer knew who she was .
15 ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’
16 The San Giorgio case is also of interest for present purposes in that it accepts that Community law does not prevent a national legal system from disallowing repayment of charges where to do so would entail unjust enrichment of the recipient , in particular where the charges have been incorporated into the price of goods and so passed on to the purchaser .
17 Lewis suddenly wandered on to the stage and started playing , hotly pursued by the band , who had not been tipped off .
18 He was n't strong enough to get on to the par-5s in two for eagle chances , so he just chipped and putted for birdies .
19 If only to get on to the practical arrangements . ’
20 If that could be added that would achieve my objectives and we can all get on to the debate about V A T on .
21 By now you will have stimulated the circulation enough to move on to the next stage , which is kneading .
22 At the same time the press had been tipped off that the Health Minister was leaving the country on holiday from Heathrow and half a dozen photographers had literally chased on to the runway to photograph him .
23 However , the Cuban leader had eagerly latched on to the dramatic statements made by Khrushchev in June-July 1960 .
24 A symbiotically mute pair then sectioned each of these into eight translucent oblongs , flouring them and stacking them delicately to sell on to the baklava and bougatsa makers round the corner .
25 At one stage she somehow got on to the subject of coal and said she simply did not believe it came from wood .
26 We somehow got on to the subject of detective stories , for it had been with some surprise that I learnt at the Old Parsonage meeting that at one time he had read them with avidity .
27 it just goes on to the edge here .
28 Mr Hamilton-Renwick soon moved on to the Dobermann 's smaller relative , the Miniature Pinscher .
29 Tell her you know how she feels , but do n't give in to her demands , as she 'll soon latch on to the idea that throwing a tantrum gets her what she wants .
30 Demand is so high that there is bound to be plenty of interest in two new properties in need of some tender loving care which have just come on to the market .
  Next page