Example sentences of "[adj] [verb] [adv prt] on [art] " in BNC.

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1 The former James Bond star got stagefright only weeks before the curtain was due to go up on the original West End show and made a shock exit .
2 Runswick Bay , a multi-million pound investment by Yorkshire Television , is due to go out on the network five days a week next year .
3 Canon Wright said : ‘ I believe that to go back on the progress that was made in the convention would be a retrograde step , for what is going to replace it ? ’
4 It was pleasant to stroll around on an evening such as this , thinking productively about the work which would make his name ( and his fortune ) and restore to him the sense of achievement he had so greatly enjoyed as an undergraduate journalist and Union wit .
5 Back in the Company 's suite after debriefing — ‘ You 've proved , ’ said Nils without praise — Jezrael was free to go out on the town .
6 As a young person , I am often quite afraid to go out on the streets in case I am approached by one of these grey-haired vandals and informed how much worse the world is these days or interrogated as to why young people do n't have any respect anymore .
7 If he 's done anything really wicked I do n't think HMG would be prepared to go out on a limb on his behalf .
8 Free to smell again the sweat on the brow of the bourse ; free to bask in the slipstream of wide-bodied jets ; free to sit in on the counsels of the alleged good and the alleged great .
9 Some of them started to run towards the airport building , and a few knelt down on the wet tarmac .
10 Although the right had advocated foreign withdrawal they were well aware that the retention of some American troops was needed to prevent communist domination — ‘ Under Shtikov 's proposal , [ a ] strong Korean Communist Army in [ the ] North of Korea would be free to sweep down on the virtually unarmed south and quickly over-run it . ’
11 Do you want another lie down on the settee ?
12 And as he closed the window of his room against the night frost , he was afraid to look out on the hills in case he heard angels sing and the other folk in the home would dismiss the story because of the two , long drawn out drinks he had before sleep closed down another Christmas Day .
13 This cuts down on the suspense and Ballantyne sees it as being comic .
14 I hope that this gets back on the road because clearly people are starting to put things in the proper places for recycling .
15 Bills accepted by banks designated as ‘ eligible ’ banks by the Bank of England become first-class bills which the Bank of England is willing to deal in on the market .
16 Oh it took some sorting out on the next morning .
17 As I banked to port to make a full beam attack on the nearest 88 I sighted the 109s coming down on the other three .
18 Yeah , so you 'd anticipate some coming in on the A fifty nine , if you went that far north ,
19 Unfortunately this fell out on the third ascent .
20 I think , you know , you say you 've got a month , I think you 're gon na need also to try and find out from your membership as to whether in fact they 're prepared to turn up on a Saturday as well .
21 Until the English clamped down on the custom my forefathers all used the prefix ‘ ap ’ in front of their names — the last king of South Wales , for instance , was Rhys ap Tewdwr .
22 So in other words we got eight tens left over on the bottom .
23 By July 1959 , the station has almost disappeared , but an atmospheric background was still provided by Grassmoor Colliery as B1 No. 61111 ran through on a Nottingham-Sheffield local .
24 According to sources at the highest level , the Santa Cruz Operation Inc has ‘ bitten the ideological bullet , ’ and is prepared to step out on the Unix SVR4 road — if it can cut the deal it wants with Unix owner USL .
25 For months SCO has resisted adopting SVR4 even though SCO co-founder Doug Michels recently told Unigram.X he had finally ‘ bitten the ideological bullet ’ and was prepared to step out on the SVR4 road provided it could get the right terms ( UX No 398 ) .
26 She blinked at Shiona and half sat up on the bed .
27 It was exciting to travel up on the night train and to find Granny waiting beside the fire in the hall , as exhilarated by the festivities as any of her grandchildren .
28 I told them , as I tell alumni wherever I meet them , that the best thing you can do for the University is to remember its strengths , and in your normal professional and daily lives to be prepared to speak up on the University 's behalf when you think it is appropriate .
29 It is impossible to creep up on the duck , because its 360 degree vision takes in the slightest movement anywhere around it .
30 Even long-drained regions , such as Longdon Marsh in Worcestershire , are easy to pick out on the Ordnance Survey as ‘ holes ’ on the map .
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