Example sentences of "[vb infin] on [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ It has been announced by the Chancellor Neville Chamberlain that work will recommence on the hull designated 534 in Clydebank .
2 Czechoslovak Prime Minister Marian Calfa declared on Feb. 5 that work would recommence on the basis of the so-called " C " scheme , which envisaged the diversion of Danube waters .
3 They have every right to be different — it 's very presumptuous of us to invent personalities for them simply because we 've seen them act on a cinema screen , but it can still be a shock when they 're not as you 'd hoped .
4 Dáil members would act on a decision of the hierarchy once that hierarchy had said the teaching of the church was at issue , providing of course that the area in question was a grey one , a new territory not previously covered by the generally accepted sacred-profane spheres .
5 They represent an attempt to retain autonomy through prior expression of will , after the ability to choose and act on the choice has gone .
6 The Greek and Turkish members of the Commission were not delegates of their respective States who could act on the instructions of the member States , but members of an administrative body .
7 Does he realise that if he will not act on the problem , it will not only produce a tide of human misery , but will bring to a clattering end any hope of economic recovery ?
8 The surroundings include all other objects which might act on the system under investigation .
9 The parliamentary reserve is lifted , and the Government can act on the proposals in the Council without further reference to the House .
10 We can ready quickly , we can learn things quickly , we can cope , we can act on the whole rather better and rather quicker than the Continentals .
11 Various organisations and societies will act on the artist 's behalf in this respect and , in return for an annual subscription fee , will deal with necessary paperwork and pass on agreed fees .
12 ‘ We must act on the complaints , ’ said a spokesman for the council .
13 He may also act on the principle that ‘ things have always been done this way ’ and justify his actions accordingly .
14 … the court … must act on the valuation unless there be proof of some mistake or improper motive … as if the valuer has valued something not included or had valued it on a wholly erroneous basis … from Lord Eldon 's judgment in Emery v Wase ( 1803 ) 8 Ves Jun 506 , where the difference between valuations of £4,000 and £6,000 was said to warrant judicial suspicion that the valuation had not been made with attention to accuracy : but the case was decided on the basis of the court 's duty to protect the property of married women .
15 We would all act on the assumption that others were acting in a similar manner .
16 A trader should never act on the presumption of retrieving his circumstances when he had become flagrantly insolvent .
17 Her Department should act on the recommendation that local officers should be able to top up that gap for claimants if no other resources are available .
18 The earliest the Treasury could act on the tax front , would be March 1991 .
19 Did Marsilid act on the enzyme in the brain and protect a transmitter amine from premature destruction ?
20 What principally weighs with me in thinking that Lord Coke made a mistake of fact is my conviction that all men of business , whether merchants or tradesmen , do every day recognise and act on the ground that prompt payment of a part of their demand may be more beneficial to them than it would be to insist on their rights and enforce payment of the whole .
21 But whether Idealism helped Liberalism and the ‘ New ’ Liberals to speak and act on the basis of a more dynamic and conceptually successful social theory , or whether , to quote Michael Freeden , ‘ Rather than Idealism giving birth to a new version of liberalism , it was liberalism that was able to assimilate certain aspects of Idealism to its mainstream and thus bestow new meaning upon Idealist tenets ’ , is not a problem of immediate relevance here .
22 The line of argument depends upon two principal features : ( a ) there is a need to produce an oven justification for practices which might be criticized and this justification must explain racial discrimination in terms of anything other than irrational preferences ; ( b ) the discourse implies that irrational preference would be morally bad and the good intentions of the speaker , and those whom the speaker justifies , are guaranteed if they are shown to differ from those who might act on the basis of irrational prejudices .
23 The constable need not have witnessed the conduct in question before he utters his warning ; he could act on the basis of a report that he received from a person who has been caused harassment , alarm or distress , or on the report of somebody who has witnessed it .
24 In a situation in which the Crown can only act on the advice of her ministers and where the Lords have been stripped of powers , the Commons is the pre-eminent part of Parliament .
25 It did n't act on the living , like yeast .
26 It involves making judgements about how people will and should behave on the basis of gender stereotypes believed to be determined by their sex .
27 He can waffle on about OPEC ad infinitum , and most clients wo n't know what the hell he 's talking about , but they 'll pretend to agree with him and will buy on the strength of what he says .
28 You can buy on the spot .
29 ‘ … and three of our aircraft have failed to return , ’ the man who read the news would intone on the midday bulletin .
30 How the hell do you jump on a Lucy , a lady , a Lucy , someone who appears fragile as glass , goes warm and soft like a trusting animal in your arms , then tough as steel with her polished NO — ?
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