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

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1 DEC 's announcement that it would concentrate on OSF/1 only for the Alpha range made enough customers angry for DEC to go back to its business plan and think again .
2 Example 2:9 Right of way : limited times The right in common with the landlord and all others having the like right at all times between 8.30 am and 6.30 pm on weekdays and between 8.30 am and 1.30 pm on Saturdays ( but not on public holidays ) to pass and repass on foot only through the main entrance to the building of which the demised property forms part and over the stairs and corridors leading therefrom to the demised property ( c ) Lifts A right to use a lift may be implied in the case of a letting on , say , the tenth floor of a block ( Liverpool City Council v Irwin [ 1977 ] AC 239 ) or where it would be inconvenient and uneconomic for the tenant to use the stairs ( Dikstein v Kanevsky [ 1947 ] VLR 216 ) .
3 As Mike had feared , the chimps did appear on film rather like dark shadows lost in the leaves .
4 Casting will take place at the Carlton Highland Hotel on Friday , March 5 , and the successful applicants will appear on screen later in the year to take about the cinema .
5 It 's the main ‘ motorway ’ through the city , and there are a dozen or so stalls on the Rialto selling souvenirs — including the painted masks you 'll see on sale all over the city .
6 The apparently irreversible trend in the insurance industry , in common with others in the financial services sector , to move away from high-risk , low-return business and focus on specialised , value-added lines ( stop-loss insurance , financial insurance to smooth the impact of a single year 's sudden loss on the balance sheet with repayment over subsequent years , and so on ) , means that organisations must look on insurance almost as a last resort after exhausting all the possibilities of minimising risk cost-effectively in-house .
7 The numbers returned in the student forecasts show a substantial increase , particularly in the latter part of the planning period , but much will depend on decisions still to be taken by the HEFCE on what constitutes an ‘ accredited ’ course .
8 If he does lean on Graham again after tomorrow , then I 'll stand up and be counted .
9 Oh , by the way , the game should go on sale just in time for Chrimble …
10 Do tickets go on sale tomorrow before the Ipswich game ?
11 The Amstrad chairman , Alan Sugar , said the device would go on sale early in May costing £299 including value-added tax , a price that would ‘ embarrass the competition when their products eventually arrive ’ .
12 There are two options open to us : we can either mount a much more restricted display in the Library than originally hoped ( restricting ourselves to the two display cases in the Barrel Vault leading to the foot of the main staircase ) , or we can examine the possibility of creating a panel-mounted display which would go on show both in the Library and in other venues .
13 The 40,000 exhibits , covering 1,500 years , may go on display again in Yorkshire
14 Come on now , Malachi , do n't stand on ceremony here at home . ’
15 Whereas a woman who dies before her husband is considered to have made a good death and her body is decked in a married woman 's finery , one who survives her husband is somehow always blamed for his death and must never put on finery again as a penance .
16 I must put on record again in the House the fact that , although the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland has granted the UDR Four the right of appeal , it would appear that the Crown solicitor is still withholding information from the defence .
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