Example sentences of "[be] able hold [adv] to " in BNC.

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1 They 're able to hold on to that for the duration of the talk and be able to understand them as concepts and therefore it helps to put over the ideas .
2 I 'm happy with the five hundred thousand pounds suggestion , but my view when you come to the papers , if we are able to hold on to the two hundred thousand contingency we 've got for community care for the elderly and , and the hundred thousand we 've got for bad debts and other figures .
3 It was kicked around like a football from family to family , none of whom seemed to have loved it or to have been able to hold on to it for long .
4 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 .
5 Because that would mean that he would have been able to hold on to his job .
6 By holding on to that possession , the people of this country would be able to hold on to the banners of freedom .
7 yeah , yes verbally yes if we 're writing we 'd actually be six but it was it was the span of conception was n't it the capacity of the brain The span of conception says that if you deliver your presentation in groups of three in three themes and three subthemes then the audience is able to hold on to that and the way in which we set up the delivery or the way in which we delivered the structured thought pattern was through method
8 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 .
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