Example sentences of "[vb infin] on to [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | Fortunately , the majority warm to it and do go on to fulfilled fatherhood . |
32 | Spend the immediate post-Smiths period saying how he was the talented one and would go on to great things . |
33 | Emboldened by his success , the being could go on to parallel transport the vector a along the closed path NABN in Fig. 3.8 . |
34 | But of course Robert was right and the rider did go on to greater things . |
35 | And since the central figure in all this was Vincent d'Indy , I shall go on to present evidence that appears to explain his motives both in ‘ improving ’ Rameau and in concealing what he had done . |
36 | But since we are in agreement , let's go on to other things . |
37 | ‘ Kelly believed she , too , would go on to other things that God planned for her . ’ |
38 | ‘ Kelly believed she too would go on to other things God had got planned for her . ’ |
39 | That 's the sort of the general trend erm and from there we can go on to other things . |
40 | This mortality risk is much lower for chronic stable angina but a similar number of patients in both groups will go on to coronary artery bypass surgery . |
41 | Let's go on to another subject which is another subject we 'll be dealing with today . |
42 | For example , she uses Let's go on to another topic where a literal translation of the Hebrew would be ‘ Perhaps we shall/should go on to another topic ’ and Let's begin with the question of defence policy where the Hebrew is literally ‘ Perhaps we shall start with the question of defence policy ’ . |
43 | For example , she uses Let's go on to another topic where a literal translation of the Hebrew would be ‘ Perhaps we shall/should go on to another topic ’ and Let's begin with the question of defence policy where the Hebrew is literally ‘ Perhaps we shall start with the question of defence policy ’ . |
44 | If they handle it , they 'll go on to another wing and that 's when the hard work begins . |
45 | In particular the block examination at 16+ appears to have lost its justification , when almost all 16-year-olds will go on to further education of some sort , whether in a sixth form or elsewhere . |
46 | Out of seventy children in the village school only sixteen could go on to further education after the age of ten or eleven . |
47 | And then it wo n't go on to this side . |
48 | I got ta go on to next Thursday . |
49 | These problems may then lead on to additional difficulties at school , especially if the teaching staff mistake linguistic delay as indicative of limited intelligence , or interpret differences in a child 's ability to use language as a sign of impaired ability to learn language ( Heath 1983 ) . |
50 | He had in those days of innocence seen the Edition as a finite task that would lead on to other things . |
51 | That type of education can also achieve access , which can lead on to other types of training and education . |
52 | Often this can lead on to valuable work on the subject of bias in documents . |
53 | Successful work using primary evidence may lead on to creative expression , which may come from a synthesis of the information gathered from the documentary evidence . |
54 | Use of a picture will often lead on to further activity . |
55 | Other questions may lead on to further enquiry and research . |
56 | Fieldwork in a historic landscape will often lead on to further research and document work to try to make sense of what has been found . |
57 | Erm , we are indeed talking to Health Authority about the matters that were mentioned but can I come on to occupational therapists because I 'm very glad to say that erm we are able to recruit occupational therapists in this county . |
58 | I 've put it resting on the dish so that any acid from it does n't get on to that bench there . |
59 | ‘ How did you get on to this Hilton business ? ’ demanded Morgan . |
60 | She could quite happily spend a few days here , just remembering her own childhood : the train set , the beautifully designed doll 's house , the football game … it made her sad that she had no children of her own so that she could cling on to that childhood that she so often missed . |