Example sentences of "hold on to a " in BNC.

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1 Don Johnson holds on to a chic Melanie Griffith ( above )
2 Then there is the decay of the tree which sometimes holds on to a little bit of life well past when it should die completely .
3 But not going when you need to causes water absorption and hardening , and the longer the child holds on to a movement , the harder it will be — making the problem worse .
4 hold on to a finished thing ?
5 Curve the body to one side and hold on to a part of your leg that you can reach easily , stretching the other arm straight up .
6 Daisy had brought her sketch pad , but found it difficult to capture the action and hold on to a straining Ethel .
7 Hankin , who spent 18 months at Peterborough under John Wile before being released in 1985 , saw his young braves survive numerous corners and hold on to a point against a side who have seen off Liverpool and Newcastle at home this season .
8 The path to the abbey ruins was under water , but I managed to keep dry by sidling along the edge , holding on to a fence .
9 In the legend of Theseus , in Greek mythology , he prevented himself from getting lost in the Cretan labyrinth by holding on to a silken thread .
10 The horses were being led and one of the men was limping badly and supporting himself by holding on to a stirrup .
11 He accepts then the necessity to permit the destruction of some forms of life , while at the same time holding on to a firm belief in the essential unity of all life and the principle of non-violence .
12 Occasionally they walk upright along a branch , grasping it with their toes but always holding on to a branch above their heads with their hands .
13 She would speak of the necessity of holding on to a framework of belief , a reasonable percentage of belie
14 You 've got an S O four with two bonds on it and it 's holding on to a hydrogen
15 ‘ You 're all right , though ? ’ he said at last , holding on to a Gorgonzola .
16 In the story , Frank had to be seen shooting through the roof of the church moments later and holding on to a cross , before being rescued by a helicopter .
17 Toddlers often rose on their toes , held their legs stiffly , and rocked back and forth holding on to a piece of furniture or onto the parent .
18 Sachin Tendulkar moved quickly on to 19 at which stage the Indian was twice put down , first by Mark Nicholas at short cover and then by David Gower who could not hold on to a hot left-handed chance at second slip , the unlucky bowler on both occasions being Connor .
19 However , for the third time this season , Wantage could not hold on to a lead given them in the last five minutes , and allowed Andy Martin to shoot home for the equaliser for Bicester .
20 HTV 's advertising revenue rose 11.8 per cent to £101.8m , and the group managed to hold on to a creditable market share of 6.4 per cent as advertising has been sucked to South-east England .
21 Interest waned in the afternoon , but with conditions still said to be ‘ squeezy , ’ the Treasury 11¾p.c. 2003–07 was able to hold on to a rise of £516 to £117⅝ on a yield of 9.13p.c .
22 Morris was at the heart of an amazing North defensive effort to hold on to a 24-17 half-time lead in the face of a strong second-half wind .
23 Consequently , he is continually having to hold on to a sense of humility while he listens to other people , otherwise he can too easily defend himself by taking up a judgemental posture .
24 What we should remember , however , is that workers have not always had the same kinds of experiences I have just described and have , consequently , been able to hold on to a sense of political relatedness between themselves as individuals and groups vis-à-vis society and the industrial enterprises within it .
25 Whatever the inner pressures within us to hold on to a prejudicial attitude , when a Christian maintains a prejudice and fails to aim for its resolution , the problem may well be a conflict with God 's truth , of actually resisting God 's will .
26 Vaughan 's constant sense that he was one of life 's outsiders , never a participant , that he was always ‘ trying to hold on to a reality which is no more than a projection of my own nerves ’ , made him sympathetic to the blighted , visionary anti-hero in Benjamin Britten 's opera , Peter Grimes , the première of which marked the reopening of the Sadler 's Wells Theatre after the war .
27 On the positive side , I would argue that these devices may make it easier to withstand setbacks , to hold on to a belief in ultimate victory when times are hard , because they all underline the continuities of racial oppression .
28 They are much more likely to hold on to a degree of independence .
29 Trying to snatch a word with you is like trying to hold on to a fistful of quicksilver . ’
30 One colleague described the experience as ‘ trying to hold on to a handful of wasps .
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