Example sentences of "[noun] have [vb pp] back on " in BNC.
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1 | Hewlett-Packard Co has swung back on the offensive in the US with a predatory enhanced workstation trade-in programme , which it says accepts the broadest range of workstations , personal computers and X terminals in part exchange for new Precision Architecture RISC workstations and X stations . |
2 | ‘ Salamanca has cut back on its staff , ’ he said . |
3 | But he 's moaning to me the other week about you know , er and I bloody near said to him , well er , things have come back on you know , but I should of |
4 | All seven Fulmars had landed back on the carrier by 2015 but two were again scrambled almost immediately on the approach of three more S.79s . |
5 | Liberal Democrat candidate Peter Allen claimed the Government has cut back on its training budget . |
6 | Ignoring this , the present Government has cut back on the already poorly resourced Youth Training and Employment Training programme . |
7 | OR when a gate has swung back on a horse rapping its knees or trapping its foot . |
8 | Mr Delors claimed Mr Major had gone back on his word that Britain would help fund the EC-backed High Definition TV , being developed by France and Holland . |
9 | A number of institutions had cut back on travel in order to balance their budgets . |
10 | But with falling profits many employers have cut back on the perk . |
11 | He had a high-rolling joint on the SS Nocturne , a ship anchored outside the limits , and some nasty rumours had floated back on the tides along with a well-dressed corpse or two . |
12 | The power 's come back on . |
13 | THE Tories have fallen back on a quack cure for the economic ills they are forcing upon our country — even higher prescription charges . |