Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] on at " in BNC.

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1 Because they have been treated more as adults here , the contrast between this and ordinary school makes it sometimes difficult for them to return and adapt to being treated as children again , so it is obviously preferable for them to continue on at the unit .
2 Would I stay on at night to go over some sales figures ?
3 And I got on at 50-1 immediately after that race , and had a fair bet .
4 So what they says is that I , I got on at this wall , jumped across onto this other wall , shinned up the outside of this other wall , stood on top of this the first floor wall and jumped up and caught hold of the top of the second floor wall and he reckon in the la about fucking twenty odd seconds , I was up and over and in , they , they , they fucking kill yourself , get down , I ca n't remember none of it .
5 I 'm quite pleased with how I got on at work today with the amount of work I 'd done that
6 I kept on at the council , but it was n't easy to get a council flat in those days .
7 You should have seen the butter he put on his toast in the mornings , I kept on at him but you know what he was like , he would n't be told .
8 Should I rave on at him for being a litter lout ?
9 Right now I do n't want to get you up I want to encourage you to set your alarm for seven o'clock , quite low , and when I come on at about two minutes past just snuggle up to your wireless and enjoy the music and the news and the views about the religious scene in and around North Yorkshire and beyond .
10 I carried on at the same point in the book and you did not seem to notice .
11 So during my three years at University College Swansea I carried on at the shop in the evenings doing the ordering , and on Saturdays running the general book department and the educational department .
12 If I stayed on at Bletchley — which I was reluctant to leave — I should scarcely ever see Leslie before the invasion of France , which we all knew was expected within a very few months .
13 Granpa clapped so loud as I returned to my place that some of the mums looked round and smiled , which made the old fellow even more determined to see that I stayed on at school until I was fourteen .
14 How d' ya get on at nursery ?
15 How d' ya get on at the dentist ?
16 I I 'm I say you must excuse me going on at such a pace but I 've got A I 've got another meeting quite shortly and B you 've got some little mo I think M Michael 's looking to take over .
17 Yeah , er well if they 're not too careful she 'll of grown up before they realize it , oh she goes on at you oh , like an old woman , she knows everything , she knows more than Judith about what 's going on
18 Yes and did you stay on at the hospital then ?
19 Y … you get on at the back , ’ replied the driver in a squeaky voice .
20 This contact may be by post , by telephone or by personal meetings ; the choice will depend very much on how important you are to a magazine and the magazine to you and thus how often you are likely to be working with this particular publication , how physically near you are to each other and indeed how well you get on at a social level .
21 However , in the preparation of final-year seminar papers and dissertations , or if you continue on at college as a research student , you will need to find out details of all the work that others have already carried out in the field in which you are interested .
22 As the new presenter , Nicholas Witchell is chiefly celebrated for sitting on a lesbian during a news bulletin , you switched on at dawn with some cynicism .
23 How did you go on at the fox hunt today ?
24 Dr Barnardo 's was another charity she took on at about the same time ; this charity has left its old orphanage image behind , and the Princess feels her connections with it have been fruitful .
25 If you stay on at school , or go to a college of further education , you are still entitled to placement through the Compact , provided you have achieved the Compact goals .
26 at does anybody know how she went on at her dance New Year 's Eve ?
27 In the case of regression to earlier times in your present life , there will be enough evidence for you to check on at a later date , even if you are not actually aware of specific people or events .
28 how did she get on at er the course ?
29 ‘ How did you get on at school , Jane ? ’ asked her mother .
30 How did you get on at the doctor 's ?
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