Example sentences of "[vb pp] on [pron] [pers pn] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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1 But , as long as the music had doh ray mes written on it I could play with one hand but
2 Settling in , I looked out of the window and reflected on what it must have been like for the men building the Trans-Australia Railway when hundreds of navvies , using horses , camels and a few machines , battled their way across the inhospitable plain , which in winter crackles underfoot with frost while summer temperatures exceed a baking 50°C .
3 Although the use of everyday common-sense beliefs is usually not only unsystematic and inadequate but also often contradictory , if we look more closely at common sense it is likely such explanations of the world are based on what we shall call here ‘ individualistic ’ and/or ‘ naturalistic ’ assumptions .
4 Gooch , in Cities of Dreams , postulates a society based on what we can call ‘ mental artefacts ’ ; that is , ideas rather than physical constructions .
5 Science is based on what we can see and hear and touch , etc .
6 In the 1990s the report of these professional organizations who constituted a separate industry , was based on what they could discover about the applicant 's known record to date as regards prompt and full payment , on the applicant 's own assertions and , controversially ( because of possible contravention of the Data Protection Act ) information volunteered upon questioning by third parties .
7 The amount that you are assessed to pay is based on what you should be able to afford to take out as a loan .
8 a tendency to be based on what you can read and what you understand of today 's social problems , I mean every thing we 've had so far apart from the industrial revolution and the history behind it
9 But he had given patient thought to the matter , just as he had to the rest of the alien anatomy ; and he had ventured on what I can only call an abstraction of the human face .
10 if I 've trampled on them I would n't like them anyway I can be nice
11 Children should be judged on what they can do and on what they know , not on who they are .
12 Sixty years later , in a yet more striking case , the newly arrived Russian ambassador to Denmark , finding that the king , Christian V , was in bed and too ill to receive him , insisted on having another bed provided on which he could lie side by side with the king so that they could talk .
13 I think if we go down not having a responsible position to our debts , repaying our debts in the long term , erm , we are going to be restricted on what we can borrow with the capital , because no government is going to , you know , my party or your party , is going to let us go on building debts , and more debts by giving us permission to borrow money and more money and more money .
14 Lesley 's more of the heart , if it 's set on something she 'll do it .
15 The debate there has hardly started : for example , when John Smith says he is in favour of a bill , he needs to be pressed on what it will contain ( social and economic rights as well as political ones ? ) ; and whether it will be repealable by a simple majority of the Commons .
16 In other words , on we can establish that we yes that 's true , but we ca n't necessarily meet it because we are limited on what we can produce .
17 -WA serves to create a theme by identifying NP 's [ i.e. noun phrases ] that are to be placed on what we may call the ‘ thematic stage ’ .
18 As noone has posted or commented on it I will in case some of you did nt hear it .
19 If the wind had been stronger or the tide just a touch faster it 's broken on it we 'd be this minute !
20 Printed on it you 'll see a space for the date of birth already filled in and also a space for the date of death , not yet filled in .
21 The coach did not in fact crash and if he had remained on it he would have suffered no harm .
22 The second murder , too , will have to occur because your murderer , rightly ( or even better , wrongly ) suspects the detective is getting too close for comfort or that one of the other characters has hit on something they ought not , from his point of view , to have done .
23 The minds of the other literate villagers were dissipated on what they could pick up in a random manner : most of it naturally consisted of religious tracts , the traditional fodder left over from the past .
24 But do n't get me started on what she used to do .
25 But I think that erm once they 'd got started on it they would find it very beneficial in terms of erm improving their kind of over-all general image .
26 When beings from another planet get started on you they will laugh at your beliefs .
27 The debt-counselling charities shoulder much of the burden ; here Citizens Advice Bureaux workers from all over Oxfordshire are themselves advised on what they should tell the desperate people who come to them for help because of spiralling debt .
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