Example sentences of "move on [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It was wound up in 1950 , as Europe moved on to other things .
2 Within four months , however , work had stopped on the reaction and the project moved on to other reactions .
3 They withdrew their support and Fawcett , whom they had seconded to the project , moved on to other research .
4 Unfairly , Sandra is still best known in Britain as ‘ Madonna 's best friend ’ , the possible — but in the end rather improbable — lesbian love interest that titillated the tabloids for a while until Maddy moved on to other mock shocks .
5 People smiled , and the conversation moved on to other things .
6 Ali Cemali , who had in the years between 888 and 891 moved on to other posts , was the first appointee to the new medrese and , though his salary is not specified , the course of his career to this point suggests that it can not have been less than 50 akce a day .
7 After two hours of debate the synod voted overwhelmingly to receive the report and moved on to detailed discussion of the legislation .
8 The horse moved on to unsound ground , feeling the danger and scrabbling for a foothold .
9 However , I find yoga a bit slow and I like to exercise to music , so I moved on to popmobility-type aerobics which I named ‘ slimobility ’ .
10 ‘ Next question , ’ she moved on with wan humour .
11 Although the survey was carried out in 1987 , and events in education have moved on with amazing rapidity since then , many of the conclusions that can be drawn from the interviews seem to have retained their relevance , particularly in the context of the issue I have been exploring in this chapter .
12 Castells has now moved on to new areas of research , one of these being new forms of communications technology and the threats and opportunities represented by such developments.3 Meanwhile , however , his emphasis on consumption set the tone for a very thriving area of urban sociology by later writers in this tradition .
13 The news broadcast had moved on to other matters now ; the loss of contact between Earth Central and a Space Fleet flotilla which had been on its way to intercept a supposed alien fleet near Epsilon Eridani .
14 Kenamun clearly hoped to reap the rewards of a quick and flashy double solution , and to have moved on to other work before the murders recommenced .
15 The 12-year-old has now moved on to Branksome School , but still keeps in close contact with Philip , who lives next door .
16 Many English teams playing in European competitions have fared badly when moving on to water-based pitches , still in short supply at home .
17 OUR joined in February 1951 in the London Office , moving on to various training and sales jobs throughout Manchester , the Midlands and Essex .
18 Moving on to other types of glider
19 If a relationship is clearly becoming either more established , or girls ( and boys ) are moving on to other sexual relationships , it seems logical to take precautions .
20 Erm now , moving on to other energy .
21 While individuals may be seeking : ( 1 ) freedom to advance their careers by moving on to other firms , but " job security " in the meanwhile ; ( 2 ) payment , on death or retirement , of the full value of their partnership shares ( including capital contributions , undrawn profits , goodwill etc ) ; and ( 3 ) upon death and/or retirement from practice , financial security for themselves and their families , the firm 's priorities in the interests of preserving profitability are likely to be concentrated on : ( 1 ) the need to impose restrictions on the freedom of partners to leave without adequate notice and/or thereafter to compete with the firm ; ( 2 ) the ability to remove from the firm any partner who has failed to meet proper professional standards who is disruptive or who is not seen to be pulling his weight ; and ( 3 ) the need to minimise the strain on the firm 's finances when a partner leaves whilst recognising a certain moral responsibility towards the family of a deceased partner .
22 He is dynamic and creative , always moving on to new realisations of his infinite activity .
23 Diseases such as hepatitis and AIDS are known as " emerging viruses " , which , although they do not always threaten their original hosts , can destroy entire populations by moving on to new hosts and locations .
24 Moving on to parental understandings of change , Briault and West concede that parents will in some situations hold traditional views on matters of classroom practice .
25 Moving on to psychoanalytic , by which I understand Freudian , criticism , I am in a difficulty .
26 After 12 months you should have nice young plants nearly ready for moving on to permanent quarters or , if the cuttings are of the rugosa type and intended for rootstocks on to which you are going to bud other varieties , they can be planted out ready for working .
27 Moving on to extended reproduction , all previous assumptions hold except that now a portion of the surplus-value will be accumulated in the form of constant and variable capital , that is , as c or v.
28 His first association with the North Sea came next , working in Drilling and Forties , before moving on to Corporate Planning , in London .
29 We used peach shades , moving on to pink and white and then darker crimson and purple .
30 With urban wastes , the process is generally in two stages : digesting with algae and then moving on to anaerobic bacterial fermentation .
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