Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] on [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | He pushed her gently down on to the settee and sat so close to her that she could hardly breathe for fear that she 'd betray how much she wanted him . |
2 | She turned to look at him , and he drew her gently down on to the cool grass . |
3 | My Lords , I did not speak on the second reading of this Bill , because I spoke extremely critically on in the debate on the White Paper o on er May the 26th last year , but er I would therefore like to er commence by joining with my Right Honourable Friend Lord Whitelaw because I was so critical , in welcoming the changes which the Home Secretary has now proposed . |
4 | ‘ Sorry to mention a critic 's name so early on in the proceedings . |
5 | I reckon your sort of timetable for doing this wants to be , early next week to meet to work out exactly what questions you are gon na do and mak make a questionnaire and perhaps later on in the week Wednesday , Thursday , Friday , start to ask some people Now on the Friday this time this we this time next week you c |
6 | Have you ever been in love , Ellie ? ’ he asked , bringing them gently back on to the track he wanted . |
7 | Owen caught her and eased her gently back on to the sofa . |
8 | Sin and sex do somehow go together and this seems to tie in with the distinction I made much earlier on between the scientific view that man differs from other animals only in degree and the religious view that there is an essential difference in kind . |
9 | In their study of a sample of divorcees , Thornes and Collard ( 1979 ) found that wives tended to believe that there were marital problems much earlier on in the marriage . |
10 | The double doors allowed the wagons loaded with corn to pass right through on to the floor of the middlestead . |
11 | ‘ So long as you do n't gossip with him , no , ’ he said flatly , and turned on his heel to stride coolly out on to the terrace again , so tall he had to dodge the metal chimes that hung over the french windows . |
12 | But Kraal only shook his head and stared mournfully out on to the lovely morning , seeing only a memory of an old eagle he had argued with but always loved and who would never come back . |
13 | Corbett joined them and waited for the tankards to empty before good-naturedly bullying Ranulf into collecting their horses and making their way back on to the deserted track to Godstowe . |
14 | The friar then made his way back on to the main highway , past the Priory of St Mary Overy and across London Bridge . |
15 | The reception area had obviously been designed to impress , with its mushroom-coloured Anton Plus carpet imported from America , its three-tiered Czechoslovakian glass crystal lights , its brown leather armchairs and its crushed velour curtains draped ornately on either side of the plate glass window facing directly out on to the car park . |
16 | get into the point that like earlier on in the conversation |
17 | Fig 28 Once round on to the new tack , the board is steered on to its new course by leaning the rig forwards . |
18 | To give Londoners the range and quality of rail services enjoyed by Parisians will cost a great deal of money , but this money will have to be spent if our public transport is not to slip once again on to the mad downhill spiral of reduced investment , reduced service , reduced passengers , reduced investment and so on . |
19 | This resulted in a furious argument between Clinton and Jackson which , while appearing to threaten Clinton 's level of support among black voters , had the immediate effect of reinvigorating his campaign by propelling him once again on to the front pages of the country 's newspapers . |
20 | So if somewhere later on in the book she says , Michael Heseltine was a rotten old so and so . |
21 | We were in the sports hall and she flew right up on to the top of the climbing frame at the far end from where I was giving my little lecture . |
22 | And they 'll have tanks for the sewage , which now drops straight down on to the tracks , of course . ’ |
23 | Come straight down on to the concrete floor . |
24 | In the Technosyn equipment , the gun is arranged so that the beam fires obliquely down on to the specimen ( Fig. 6.2 ) and these magnets are not needed . |
25 | Do n't imagine you can walk easily straight up on to the Arête from the bottom of the corrie , as you may get into difficulties near the top unless you 've a head for heights . |
26 | Where there is a real emergency , the best tactic is to go straight out on to the street and recruit signatures . |
27 | There is in particular one very small hotel , the Hôtel des Rem parts , whose rear windows look straight out on to the church and its battlements , and beyond them to the woods and escarpments rising sharply behind . |
28 | Thus my first glimpse of Isvik was from the bathroom window of a seafaring man , who had exchanged his small coaster for a house on the quay looking straight out on to the Magellan Strait . |
29 | The pageant they built was crude — a ladder and a low plinth for God to sit on , a single trapdoor straight out on to the grass , a curtain across to conceal anyone who used it . |
30 | He shut the gate then just ran straight out on to the road . |