Example sentences of "[vb infin] [to-vb] on [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Also , and I do n't want to go on about this , I was a lonely person in those days and I had very little else to think about . |
2 | Am I right in thinking that you would n't want to go on with these incursions ? |
3 | An exceptional shooting accessory that you 'll want to pass on to future generations . |
4 | Erm would you like to carry on with that ? |
5 | Erm , and I I would like to come on to that immediately if I may , but again it does indicate erm , a movement , in the right direction of getting more er women employees into higher management levels . |
6 | So if you 'd like to hang on to that . |
7 | er because you know , if we wait till the twenty eighth of October er that you know , wo n't suit their purpose which is that they would like to get on with this so they can invest in plant renewal . |
8 | I 'd like to move on to this er this issue of migration . |
9 | Please pass on your ideas — whether they 're articles , photographs , or cartoons — to your local correspondent or send them to me directly at Key Street , and do not hesitate to telephone on with any suggestions you may have . |
10 | He would have to grind on till one o'clock . |
11 | So , with Sheringham still unfit , Cascarino will have to soldier on with inexperienced support . |
12 | ‘ Why does he always have to go on like that ? ’ |
13 | We 'll have to hang on to that . |
14 | I 'll have to get on with this . ’ |
15 | As for the future , well , I suppose I 'll have to move on at some time but for the moment I 'm quite happy at the theatre . |
16 | In the end , I would have to move on from this example to examine other XRs on offer around Glasgow . |
17 | For this recession to equal the previous record of 16 months it would have to drag on for another six months . |
18 | It is widely assumed that Elders will not bother to hold on to any Scottish shares and its 23.7 per cent stake will be acquired and used as the springboard for a bid . |
19 | There was a murder two nights ago in a clunch pit at Muddington — that Jacket is in exhibit and she 'll want to get on with that Is well as coping with the usual heavy load . " |
20 | Well , I 'll help you , I 'll be round , I 'll be here helping but I must I want to get on with some work . |
21 | Erm I 'm not really ans answering the question but I I did n't really want to get on to that one it 's just |
22 | I do n't want to get on to that |
23 | I said I did n't want to get on to this area because it 's you know , we could go on all night discussing whether this , well whether that . |
24 | but I ca n't afford to go on like that you see |
25 | ‘ Just ca n't seem to get on with this set . |
26 | Although one character does get to chunter on for half a page about how the real point of fund-raising is its feelgood side effects ( get-away ! ) , there is really no satirical content here at all : the real point of the book is that it features loads and loads of cartoon rumpy-pumpy : randy housewives and naughty underwear , haystacks and giant inflatable condoms , improbable sexual positions and unlikely transvestites . |
27 | ‘ Who knows , Diana may well want to move on to bigger and faster racing cars as she gets better and more confident . ’ |
28 | May we learn to get on with other people . |