on to

See also: onto, ónto, öntő, onto-, and -onto

English

Alternative forms

Preposition

on to

  1. Upon; on top of.
    My cat just jumped on to the keyboard.
  2. (informal) Aware of.
    The thought-police were on to my plans of world domination.
  3. Used to indicate, or signpost, logical progression to a new topic in a talk or discourse.
    Now. On to the system of active water uptake.
    Let's go on to item 3 in the list.

Anagrams

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