Example sentences of "i [verb] on a " in BNC.

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1 I asked on a hunch .
2 Near a tombstone-memorial by the wayside , I gazed on a crowd of boys .
3 But I mean on a sort of wider thing erm
4 If you get the limited edition of Let's Knife , you too can Singalongaknife with the free karaoke CD : I am a sweet little cat/ and I dance on a flying saucer …
5 I sit on a flat stone in one — the straw thatched roof would just have cleared my head — imagining what was kept in the neat stone alcoves .
6 I sit on a rock and listen to the water lap and the boys whistle as they pull their tin boats across the long sweep of the stony bay .
7 I sit on a smooth stone and watch yellow-breasted finches in their dipping flights across the still-warm air .
8 ‘ Sometimes I 'm so frustrated that I sit on a rock and shout my head off .
9 There are times when I go down to the beach at The Pit and I 'm the only surfer down there and I 'm so frustrated with it all that I sit on a rock and shout my head off .
10 I sit on a bench and re-read the morning paper , and try to do the crossword in my head .
11 ‘ I became homeless in London so I got on a train and ended up here ; that 's all there is to it , really . ’
12 There I got on a bus that took me to Le Hospitalet près l'Andorre , and through the frontier post at Pas de la Casa , over the Envalira pass and down into a land whose mountainous beauty at once put me under a spell I shall never forget .
13 ‘ I 've been brushing up on my Italian , ’ Molly 's father went on , ‘ with the aid of an extremely sexy-sounding signorina I got on a tape from the Fulham Public Library .
14 I got on a bus and grudgingly paid my fare to the King 's Road .
15 At last I got on a bus , which trundled quite briskly to the far end of the King 's Road , but after World 's End , where the streets were darker , the fog seemed to close in and the bus was forced to nose its way cautiously along in first gear .
16 And when I t when I got on a Friday and and paid me wages over to me Mum , which was natural for you to do , I always got th thre three pennies back .
17 And then I got on a G P scheme in Crawley in Sussex and I spent three years there .
18 I hopped on a bus to King 's Cross and then took a tube round to Leicester Square , missing out Covent Garden station as the lifts were out of action again .
19 I did n't want to wear glasses , and I was thinking how I could get out of it but finally they brought in a bunch of pairs of glasses and I was trying them on in the mirror , and I tried on a pair and I thought , ‘ Gee , these do n't look too bad ’ .
20 I think I tried on a ten did n't I ?
21 Very often I dined on a banana split , which was enormous : it consisted of a whole banana , three scoops of ice cream , syrup and whipped cream and only cost 25 cents ; we also lived on delicatessen sandwiches and salads and were so excited with the automats where we put our money in and out popped coffee .
22 This broad sketch helped me to explore the crayon 's versatility without using the final painting as a trial piece , it also helped keep the whole composition in mind as I concentrated on a specific detail in the finished painting .
23 I wandered on a yard or two , pretending to look elsewhere .
24 My attempts to look like a normal human being again were evidently not too successful — at one point in my journey , I came on a man crouching over a small brook from which he was trying to drink .
25 I came on a train here today from London in South Africa if you are black and you got on a train it would n't be as comfortable and there would be crowds in it but you would n't know whether you reached the other end because at some station a group of people would get on and shoot you indiscriminately , and get off again leaving that scene of massacre .
26 When I took it off afterwards , my hair was a mess , so I put on a turban or tied in back with a band , which is what I do every day .
27 When I was at school in the seventies , one afternoon every week throughout the winter term , I put on a pair of ill-fitting plimsolls and plodded miserably , and for no apparent reason , around the wet pavements of a Sussex market town .
28 I put on a jersey and jacket and lay with head and shoulders propped against a locker , eating sardines and mopping the oil from the can with fresh bread .
29 ‘ As noon approached , I put on a raincoat and hat .
30 I put on a bit of make-up — not like before , not like a freak , just enough to make me feel respectable .
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