Example sentences of "on for a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The managing director of Oxford United said the club will fight on for a new stadium , despite planning problems . |
2 | With Horton and his assistant David Moss gone … the search is on for a new management team … what happens now … that 's what managing director Keith Cox has got to decide |
3 | With Horton and his assistant David Moss gone … the search is on for a new management team … what happens now … that 's what managing director Keith Cox has got to decide |
4 | THERE was much early enthusiasm from both sides in this senior friendly at Hamilton Park with visitors Portadown just hanging on for a narrow victory . |
5 | The gayer , shorter girls would come on for a general dance to the Gavotte . |
6 | The court had heard that Rhys had now been accepted for a transplant operation at a Bristol hospital and the search was on for a suitable bone marrow donor . |
7 | He has now been accepted for a transplant operation at the Bristol Royal Hospital for Sick Children and the search is on for a suitable bone marrow donor . |
8 | Behind the scenes , apparently unknown to the minister and BT , there is a hunt on for a suitable candidate , probably Prince Philip or Prince Charles . |
9 | But while the search went on for a suitable donor , Evelyn and Peter Walker kept a constant vigil by their ten-year-old daughter 's hospital bedside . |
10 | In patient 10 , who had been operated on for a bleeding ulcer seven years previously , a gastric lymphoma was diagnosed on the basis of biopsy specimens . |
11 | A visitor to a public house who is asked to stay on for a private party by the landlord will remain a visitor . |
12 | I tell you what I 'll do — I 'll pop downstairs and put the kettle on for a good cup of tea . ’ |
13 | Specialist series : These programmes are usually on for a limited period and cover specialist subjects such as holidays , motoring , food and wine or industry . |
14 | I went to the sink and turned the cold tap on for a long drink to combat the dehydration . |
15 | They had gone on for a long distance , before arriving at a door in a long , anonymous wall ; the letter bearer , a gloomily serious young man with eyebrows which met across his brow , maintaining a severe silence throughout the journey . |
16 | It could go on for a long time in this condition , like the Spanish Empire in its centuries of decline . |
17 | History shows it can go on for a long time , as deficits and surpluses did during the golden age before the First World War . |
18 | The extension of the theatre of war to south-eastern Europe had , despite the German triumph , led to increased concern that the war could now drag on for a long time . |
19 | This view lingered on for a long time and probably still exists to this day . |
20 | At nine-thirty tea was served in the next room and conversation went on for a long time , above all if Mérimée or Octave Feuillet ( the novelist who was librarian at Fontainebleau ) were seated next to the Empress . |
21 | ‘ It dragged on for a long time afterwards . |
22 | It went on for a long time afterwards , I do n't know if he 's still in love with me , ’ she says . |
23 | The enjoyment of gross physical activity goes on for a long time , progressing to skipping and rushing-about games . |
24 | This sort of exchange went on for a long time . |
25 | ‘ It all seemed to go on for a long time , but it must have been just a few seconds . ’ |
26 | ‘ The attack went on for a long time and the victim is obviously very shocked , ’ said police . |
27 | ‘ What has made it particularly difficult , for manufacturers of all sizes , but most of all for smaller ones , is that it has gone on for a long time . |
28 | ‘ It 's been going on for a long time , but yer Mum 's bin very foolish an' so have the rest . |
29 | That is to say , if a stress is left on for a long time , wood will gradually run away from the load . |
30 | The list could go on for a long time . |