Example sentences of "on at [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A lady I knew many years ago designed knitted suits and so on at the drop of a hat .
2 Some of these ‘ emotional bindings ’ go on at a level below the surface of normal awareness .
3 Although twilight had not yet come , the lights of the fair were switched on at a quarter past six , and the first strains of music from the roundabout spread the news that Mrs Curdle 's annual fair was now open .
4 The best way to see the City is from the canals and we have included a ‘ Canal Bus ’ Pass , valid for the whole day around the famous canals ; this pass allows you to get off and on at a selection of stops for you to explore the city .
5 Yeah but they , will they , they wo n't sell you on at a discount will they ?
6 Nicholson wanted to loiter with the man who — in his eyes — could pluck with ease a flower he could only look on at a distance .
7 Instead he stayed on at a factory .
8 ‘ You do n't half keep on at a girl , ’ said Dolly .
9 Two were carrying on at a polytechnic , and one was training to be a teacher at a college of Higher Education .
10 Well , you could have put that scene he made on at a theatre in the West End and charged for tickets , I reckon .
11 He had had enough of carrying on at a snail 's pace .
12 The first time she wore it , Nigel kept his coat on at a party so that he could hold the side out and cover the vision .
13 ‘ And , you know , I have n't the faintest idea of what actually goes on at a baby farm .
14 The problem for Galileo was that , once suspicions were aroused , the machinery of censorship could be switched on at a moment 's notice .
15 Still they waited , as the Scots came on at a canter .
16 The expressive exuberance of marks is noted along with the predominance of red , with the paint ‘ … rasped on at a stroke or teased into fuzzy blotches ’ .
17 The foundry 's most famous loco was the Derwent of 1845 , which worked on the S&DR until the 1860s and soldiered on at a colliery until 1891 .
18 Only one of these ten l.e.d.s is on at a time , the position changing to the following l.e.d. with each successive input pulse .
19 They 've seen the introduction of performance related pay , personal contracts , new working practices , pay freezes , pay cuts and always the fear of redundancy and all of this has been going on at a time when increasingly companies are withdrawing from national collective agreements , are establishing separate bargaining arrangements , restricting the activities of trade union officials and increasingly de-recognizing trade unions .
20 Although it was a large fire , she had never known it have more than one bar on at a time .
21 She caught the reins or bridle in her hands , and there hung suspended for a second as Anmer rushed on at a speed of over thirty miles an hour .
22 I well remember a young man who aroused special interest one weekend because he had been taken on at a place which had a certain reputation .
23 ‘ I should be taking you on at a week 's notice .
24 ( By the ‘ original pattern ’ I mean the pattern as designed for single bed knitting , not as punched out for double jacquard ; the double jacquard card is of course moving on at every row . )
25 He refused to talk about his businesswoman wife who often followed his rounds wearing bright , tight dresses and cheering him on at every green .
26 The good thing about cruises is that you always have the ship 's staff to help you if you have a problem and there are always guided tours laid on at every port of call .
27 In Ontario , cities are colourful , sophisticated , vibrant and friendly — there 's something going on at every street corner .
28 Turning to the subject of handwriting , this has been touched on at the beginning of this chapter .
29 1 What is going on at the beginning of the poem ? 2 What do you think has happened before the poem begins ? 3 Do you think the boys are afraid ?
30 The price of 36s. has thus some claim to be called the true equilibrium price : because if it were fixed on at the beginning , and adhered to throughout , it would exactly equate demand and supply ( i.e. the amount which buyers were willing to purchase at that price would be just equal to that for which sellers were willing to take that price ) ; and because every dealer who has a perfect knowledge of the circumstances of the market expects that price to be established .
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