Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [verb] on [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Eventually I moved on from the blues , picking up on Ronnie Lane again , only by this time The Small Faces had become The Faces .
2 So I went on into the town , and told them at the castle , and the lord Beringar has set a guard on the place now until daylight .
3 So I went on to the Home Office ; they 've got two employees with the name , but one 's a woman and she 's off having a baby .
4 So I pedalled on up the Via Capitano .
5 So I work on down the lambing quite a few times .
6 I think this is because they do n't practice being feminine with the boys around and so they get on with the work more .
7 Erm it allows domestic farmers to produce their so they go on to the world market and they 've got everybody else these things
8 So they rode on through the twilight , the guides either side of Johnson soothing him forward .
9 And so he went on through the calculator to get the number of ways for ten buttons — 3,628,800 .
10 And so it went on for the first 14 years of their friendship .
11 In some areas they started earlier — in the Givetian — elsewhere they lasted on into the Famennian , but in the Frasnian Stage reefs and reef limestones ( in their broadest sense ) were experiencing their finest hour .
12 He accelerated up a dark and steep hill and finally they emerged on to the flat expanse of Blackheath .
13 Sex is an animal quality which must somehow he pushed on to the other side of the great divide .
14 Thereafter we carried on with the hearing of the argument on whether Thorpe J. was or was not right to make the order which he did in the different circumstances which then existed and as to the more general issues raised by this appeal .
15 That 's very quickly it went on to the hard
16 It did n't take her long to change into her jade swimsuit and moments later she walked on to the poolside .
17 Eighteen months later he moved on into the marketing and sales department , where he was responsible for liaising between Harwell and the EEC .
18 Things happened , one heard stories , but overall you got on with the job .
19 Oh now we get on to the really difficult stuff .
20 Now we go on to the second one .
21 Now we move on to the next step of our plan .
22 Now we move on to the reflector and Irene in particular has got a very high a lot of the others .
23 Well now we move on to the election of officers and as you 've heard two er officers are , have tendered their resignation , Alan and Joan .
24 It 's not often it comes on during the day , but now and again
25 Slowly they moved on up the slope , using the trees for protection , watching and listening until they had reached the top , and open ground .
26 In this sort of book you may well find that the pattern of how-will-he-get-out-of-this is more convenient to use while underneath you get on with the purpose of your story .
27 I stayed there for some time and looked at the castle , and then I walked on through the forest for about an hour .
28 And then I got on to the , I was convenor of the housing allocation committee for very many years .
29 And er then I carried on in the woodlands then , cutting trees down and erm sawing up too .
30 Then I slid on to the stool and began the second verse , seated , then hit the foot-rest and the stool began a too-slow descent which fortunately gathered enough momentum to throw me off .
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