Example sentences of "[noun sg] hold [adv prt] to the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Ultimately , de Gaulle 's attempt to hold on to the symbolic status bestowed by 18 June and the war proved his undoing .
2 The juggernaut bucked and the poet held on to the side to prevent himself being thrown around .
3 Mr Tim Devlin 's surprise victory for the Conservatives in Stockton South to hold on to the seat he won narrowly in 1987 from the prominent SDP man ( now Sir ) Ian Wrigglesworth was a classic example of the collapse of the centre vote working against Labour .
4 Indeed there is now an incentive to hold on to the assets because if such assets are retained until death they receive a capital gains tax-free uplift ( TCGA 1992 , s62(1) ) .
5 With a little microphone held up to the telly ?
6 We would also like to ask permission to hold on to the VHS copies for a further 3 weeks to aid viewing .
7 One man held on to the lawyer 's sleeve .
8 The reserve goalkeeper held on to the place for four months , and was selected for several weeks after Grobbelaar returned to action with the reserves .
9 The reserve goalkeeper held on to the place for four months , and was selected for several weeks after Grobbelaar returned to action with the reserves .
10 But I think that was when I was in the sea holding on to the bit of foam , and more or less just let myself float under the water , but me arm was round the top of the bit of foam , on the surface , and I think it got burnt by the the heat off the platform then .
11 The merchants had the cash , but the weakening aristocracy held on to the reins of government .
12 As long as a son holds on to the mother as a love-object he must ineluctably be in conflict with the father , just as , conversely , as soon as he accepts the paternal authority and identifies with his father to constitute his superego he must suppress his fundamental parricidal antagonism and with it his incestuous fixation .
  Next page