Example sentences of "[adv] on in the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Early on in the present government 's administration a representative of Fabius warned that if research was to get the money it required , other ministries would suffer . |
2 | Leopold realised very early on in the first visit that their money would not be made by giving public performances , |
3 | The French gave support to the Scots who , from very early on in the new reign , caused trouble in the north ; while to the west , in Wales , where Owain Glyn Dŵr was to rise against English rule in 1400 , French troops landed and at one time might have been seen in the Herefordshire countryside . |
4 | Ken 's equally eccentric behaviour towards her became evident early on in the out-of-town try-outs in Brighton , Liverpool and Oxford . |
5 | If one may accept the equivalence of at least the concepts underlying the terms and on the one hand and and on the other , there is thus some solid evidence , in addition to the line of reasoning advanced above , to suggest that the concept of a division between " the interior " and " the exterior " existed at least from fairly early on in the sixteenth century ; and it is not unreasonable to suppose that the terms haric and dahil are not anachronistic in respect of the Kanunname . |
6 | Well apparently that was n't the end of the garden you see cos that came across like this and when you went through a gap in the hedge about another twenty yards further on in the far distance it seemed there was the hut . |
7 | Further on in the above entry he admits he can only be less than himself in company . |
8 | But we should be further on in the long march from paternalism . |
9 | Yellow gorse blossomed further on in the open , a cheerful show of colour . |
10 | The village contained little more than cottages , but the spirit of the day had been caught … and two or three of the best of them were smartened up with a white curtain and ‘ lodgings to let ’ — and further on in the little green court of an old farm house , two females in elegant white were actually to be seen with their books and camp-stools — and in turning the corner of the baker 's shop , the sound of a harp might be heard through the upper casement . |
11 | Later on in the 1920s the Bethell family installed their own plant for providing electricity . |
12 | Since a primitive ankylosaur looks somewhat like a primitive stegosaur , it has been suggested that the two sub-orders were really one which split apart later on in the evolutionary story . |
13 | I gave in to that later on in the '80s , by trying to be more conventional and blending in a bit more , and actually I should n't have done that . ’ |
14 | The colours were very subdued , very , very sombre , erm dove greys , muted blues , nothing bright at all , now this was n't because of dyes , although later on in the eighteen-sixties when chemical dyes really took off , the colours were correspondingly garish and bright . |
15 | However this hold upon her does not seem strong , as later on in the same scene she launches into song , cleverly making the first three lines rhyme with lead ! |
16 | You need n't feel responsible for me from now on in the slightest . ’ |
17 | One wonders whether the explanation of this may be that the Parliamentary draftsmen immediately after the Union were English lawyers , and that it was not until well on in the nineteenth century that Scottish draftsmen came to draft bills applicable to Scotland and the spelling ‘ Burgh ’ was adopted in Statutes applying to Scotland . |
18 | Jadeite , highly prized in modern China , did not appear there until well on in the eighteenth century . |
19 | there was an appeal for a penalty late on in the 2nd half but it was turned doen . |
20 | This is probably a result of inadequate treatment and is more common in those who have been treated late on in the infectious stage . |
21 | Now he was lenient earlier on in the half the official when he might have shown a red card to Laws . |
22 | Earlier on in the same piece of writing , in the same letter to the Philippians he had said that for him to die was gain . |