Example sentences of "[vb infin] on [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 As well as lines , Sumitomo had to install filters at each end of the lines to check that traffic that ought to be kept on the LAN does not disappear on to the WAN .
2 He has to decide whether he should stay on pending a full trial of the bitter dispute between the two men , who stood side-by-side as saviours of the financially troubled club in 1991 .
3 Yes , I think I shall stay on for a few days here . ’
4 On the return , you can stay on for a few nights in Copenhagen for just £39 per person per night .
5 Some Swiss wonder whether a family responsibility will perhaps work the other way , and he will stay on for the 1992 Olympics .
6 Some Swiss wonder whether a family responsibility will perhaps work the other way , and he will stay on for the 1992 Olympics .
7 Most will stay on for an extra year at school or go into some form of further training .
8 Sheena Falconer , senior lecturer in textiles , has been told by the principal , Dr David Kennedy , that there is room for only one textile lecturer , but that she could stay on as an ordinary lecturer — the post held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
9 School students will stay on in the few settlements that will be left and in schools in Cuba , West Africa and other countries .
10 You want to be very careful er , Mr Chairman , how we put out erm , information , I mean , let's face it , you know , you start sort of raising a lot of hairs if you 're not careful and if , if , even if it 's totally irrelevant people will latch on to a particular com comment and make it their own .
11 If she went out into the rue du Bateau her suspicions might latch on to an innocent person coming from one of the other flats .
12 If they think peace is impossible , they will hang on to the extra layer of defence these territories provide .
13 While I agree that worm watching will probably never catch on as a mass pursuit , something well known here in Cornwall is to observe seagulls tap dancing on the lawn after rain .
14 Back then , they did n't catch on in a big way . ’
15 Or , you can carry on up the narrow and beautiful Nive valley to the village of Esterençuby .
16 You know then we thought right , we 're not just gon na forget about this you know , we 'll we 'll carry on for a little while longer and then as soon as the ball really started rolling , er personally I thought well you ca n't back down now , .
17 The purpose of having a timetable is so that all relevant information can be digested and acted upon , and so that bids do not carry on for an unreasonable length of time .
18 The Pavlova Works will carry on for the next three months and some jobs will be made available at the group 's other centres .
19 He said then he , we could carry on with the serious stuff !
20 Senior officials could carry on with the day-to-day business of the state without concerning themselves with any kind of specialist ministerial control .
21 Even if we stopped using all CFCs today , depletion of the ozone layer — the earth 's barrier against cancer-causing ultra violet radiation — would carry on at the same rate for the next 50 years .
22 I would have been satisfied in any event that all interested parties must have anticipated that the operation of a commercial port would not be limited to the day time , but would carry on throughout the 24 hours of every day .
23 On behalf of all her fans , I would like to wish her the best of luck in 1992 and hope that she will carry on in the dedicated way she has in the past year or so .
24 ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) .
25 It was nearly a mile of steep climbing , he knew , before he would emerge on to the open heathland where The Drover 's Arms stood .
26 Solent look booked for the Division Three title but the battle for second place may run on until the final game .
27 After attempting last month 's first 8-bars of the 16-bar solo from Linda Ronstadt 's That 'll Be The Day , we 'll crack on with the second half this month .
28 you can even use on by the front gate , but use a restrained climber such as a large-flowered clematis , not a thorny rose !
29 Basic Stable Management , is designed as an introductory course and students could follow on to the Senior Horsemaster Course 1 and then onto the Senior Horsemasters Course 2 which is an equivalent level of study to the BHS Stage IV .
30 The NI economy is demand-led and based on public expenditure and a recovery in consumer demand in the UK , which will follow on from an export-led recovery , mid-to-late 1994 .
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