Example sentences of "on [prep] the next " in BNC.

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1 Despite this apparent lack of interest at high level , detail work must have been carried on during the next two years , for Gordon Thomas , together with the signatories of the memorandum , took out two patents relating to the lift .
2 Minutes later we are heading for a small island group north of Vengsøya , to round that and head on for the next .
3 ‘ Do you know , before this I went out and bought Tesco 's own-brand baked beans to live on for the next month , ’ she remarked , rather unconvincingly .
4 I therefore walked on air as I went to Westminster Evening Institute to sign on for the next Sociology year .
5 Hunter 's approach inaugurated a wide-ranging debate about ‘ community power structures ’ between elite theorists and pluralists which rumbled on for the next two decades .
6 It 's the relationship between the client and the advertiser which goes on for the next two years .
7 The Pavlova Works will carry on for the next three months and some jobs will be made available at the group 's other centres .
8 PLENTY of barmy things going on for the next few days , as the Festival of Comedy gets underway .
9 I thought at first that he was merely taking an open-air path to his own bedroom , but he went straight past the open door at the end of his sleeping car , and straight on past the next car also .
10 Tolba belongs to a political species that will become more common as the decade rolls on towards the next century .
11 Up the long stone stairs from the kitchen , into the green enclosed light of the pantry passage , then on up the next staircase , its turns mean and sudden compared with the twin sweeps of the main stairs , Nicandra plodded her careful way to Aunt Tossie 's bedroom door .
12 They walked away , and the exhibit , full of inertia and its own importance , continued to slide and pump long after they had walked on into the next display .
13 The identification with the ‘ home town ’ ( furusato ) was carried on into the next , urban-born generation .
14 Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade .
15 It is necessary for the efficiency of study , but dangerous in that you may let the ten minutes drift on into the next study period .
16 Boys flowed past them and on into the next gallery .
17 I think it opens up the child 's awareness to what 's available and what 's coming erm moves them on into the next century really .
18 But for now Kylie harnessed it to press on with the next stage of her ten year plan which had been drawn up by her musical gurus .
19 and get on with the next one
20 But the scent was so fresh , it was obvious the beasts would be unwilling to leave for a while , so Grant decided to ignore them and push on with the next stage of their operation .
21 He should then carry you on with the next question .
22 If she could fit in a few days ' break in order to attend the wedding in Andorra she would , she promised , and Peter returned to Rocamar the next day , leaving Sarella to close one chapter of her life and get on with the next .
23 You have to just get on with the next board .
24 No , no I know well ready to get on with the next bit .
25 Without waiting to find out what it meant , she broke into a trot and hurried on round the next corner .
26 I remember on one occasion the four of us went down to Glastonbury Fair where he sang , but due to a balls-up over the sound and the electricity , they did n't put him on until the next day and that was at about 5.00 in the morning when the sun came through .
27 Every few blocks , a building or two had been gutted , walls standing , roofs collapsed , as if random artillery shelling had taken out the commercial heart of the city , leaving a few lucky businesses to struggle on until the next round .
28 Each phrase followed on from the next as if stored for an age and waiting to be spoken in just this way .
29 ( The problem of recognizing C as the same object when viewed from different directions is a much harder one , which I will touch on in the next chapter ) .
30 Clive Barker ( 1977 ) of Warwick University has given new substance to the use of games in the training of actors and Brian Watkins ( 1981 ) has evolved a theoretical framework conceptually linking drama and game in a way which I shall attempt to build on in the next chapter .
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