Example sentences of "on to [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Any ball direct to deane was usually flicked on to no effect . |
2 | We stayed on board and we went up on to every deck and there was even a gentleman , he showed us up on the bridge on that er on that and , and of course there was the little shop and I bought I thought I must buy something on the Queen Elizabeth and I bought a pen . |
3 | As a result , you find yourself hanging on to every word and gesture . |
4 | He looked across the table at Meryl , who was giving a good impression of hanging on to every word Lee said . |
5 | ‘ I 've given up too many things in the past and I intend to hang on to every penny that the sale of this house fetches . |
6 | It was simply grey water in a steady stream falling on to a sea the colour of metal , on to a grey town . |
7 | Pictured right is a saffron-gatherer whose image , painted on to a wall in Thera ( now Santorini ) in the first century BC , was preserved under ash even as the volcano which produced it was destroying civilisation on the island . |
8 | Pin the tracing on to a wall . |
9 | But it comes with a very annoying gyrating sound as the mirror , activated by the music source , vibrates to reflect the light beam on to a wall or ceiling . |
10 | Sitting in the dreary Independence Hotel in Tehran late at night , McFarlane fuming in his room , the rest of the party had got on to a conversation about radars . |
11 | But Fael-Inis was concentrating on spreading honey on to a wedge of bread , and seemed not to notice . |
12 | Is the Secretary of State aware that London Underground has stated that there is no limit to the number of people who wish to push themselves on to a London Underground train ? |
13 | As soon as she 'd finished eating Luce moved the tray on to a side-table and , not without a pang , began to read the second diary , followed by the third . |
14 | Beyond that , the official Libyan theory rested mainly on the proposition that the suitcase containing the bomb had been sent unaccompanied on an Air Malta flight to Frankfurt , where , undetected by Pan Am 's inadequate security arrangements , it was loaded on to a feeder flight to London and then transferred to a third aircraft for the New York leg of the journey . |
15 | Therefore , if a tile , because it is defective , breaks and falls on to a passer-by , the manufacturer of the tile will be liable under the Act . |
16 | There are various ways of mapping a plane on to a sphere ( or vice versa ) but there is no way of doing this without producing some kind of distortion or another ; Mercator 's projection of the globe on to a flat map , leads to a diminutive Africa and an exaggerated Greenland . |
17 | To lay an egg , the female grasps a hair and deposits some ‘ cement ’ which is extruded on to a hair just before the egg is laid . |
18 | More faces can easily be loaded on to a machine , like stocking a larder with exotic ingredients . |
19 | This will lead on to a discussion of an action-based theory of mentality , the theory developed by the Swiss developmental psychologist and philosopher Jean Piaget , and then to some discussion of mental development itself . |
20 | This leads on to a discussion about the way in which new occupations associated with the new technology are likely to emerge . |
21 | The last point leads on to a discussion of how staff , volunteers and students are ‘ selected ’ for the scheme . |
22 | Having given you food for thought , I 'd like to move on to a discussion of the criteria and can I say right now that I think it would be right and proper to limit our discussion this morning to the criteria . |
23 | Then player manager Brian Flynn latched on to a Mark Taylor pass on the edge of the penalty area but his shot rebounded to safety off the inside of the post . |
24 | MIX and Max with Mel and you could be on to a video winner as we give away more than £2,500worth of Gibson tapes . |
25 | Knitters can choose from a whole range of techniques and their selection will be put on to a video , exclusive to them . |
26 | She had either fallen or been pushed on to a spike on the plough ; the level of her blood alcohol gave some credence to the idea that she had fallen . |
27 | He reached his hand inside each bird to strip its innards away before tossing the empty carcass on to a pile on the ground . |
28 | The two champions were to hurl rocks on to a pile , ( hurling rocks is a favourite sport of giants , as evidenced in C.S. Lewis 's ‘ The Silver Chair ’ ) . |
29 | This he threw with a flicking movement on to a pile of scrap iron before making his way towards them , kicking out of his path and on to yet another pile the remnants of what had been a pair of trousers . |
30 | She ran to the polished mahogany bureau , opened the lid and threw the choker on to a pile of papers . |