From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsend something ↔ on phrasal verb1 especially British EnglishTCMSEND to send someone’s letters or possessions to their new address from their old address SYN forward My flatmate said she’d send on all my post.2 SENDto send something that has been received to another place so that it can be dealt with to The data is then sent on to the Census Bureau. → send→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
send to• It lurched and toppled, sending Becky on to her knees on the kitchen floor.• If the total strength of the input signals exceeds a certain threshold, the unit sends a signal on to other units.• Each day when he had assimilated all the information, he sent it on to Trepassey.From Longman Business Dictionarysend something → on phrasal verb [transitive] to send something that has been received to another place so that it can be dealt withDon’t let your paperwork pile up: send it on as soon as possible and work to a deadline. → send→ See Verb table