Example sentences of "would [adv] go [adv prt] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I 'd rather go back to work , ’ said Sarah .
2 I 'd rather go out with dad anyway .
3 Since E ' ; lies below the corresponding point on LAC at the output Q ' ; , the monopolist is making losses and would rather go out of business .
4 On Wednesday , facing demands for more detail , Mr Lamont 's deputy , Michael Portillo , and the Treasury said that benefits would only go up in proportion to the RPI .
5 He was however er reasonably clear as to the speed at which local authorities tend to deal with these matters , he said that it always takes a long time and getting any answer out of the local authority might well take somewhere between six months and up to two years , he thought that perhaps eighteen months was a reasonable guess before he would actually manage to get somebody if Paul were to move as er , it maybe well occur to here or a different local authority then of course the application would just go back to square one and that would lead to more delay .
6 ‘ If only she would not go on about Cambridge so , ’ Miss Waters regretted .
7 What he did decide , and June did not try to dissuade him , was that he would not go back to school .
8 Remember that Labour and Liberal Democrats would not go back to rates — they want people to pay a double income tax — and Labour want a property tax as well .
9 A seller who accepted an unlimited liability for economic loss on many of his transactions would soon go out of business .
10 Bienvida , being two years his junior , asked wistfully if he thought she would ever go back to Brian .
11 If she had n't arranged to take Sandra to the doctor 's Marjorie would probably go back to bed herself , now , with a cup of tea and the Daily Mail .
12 Most of the people who went to Virginia or the West Indies were clearly looking for an opportunity to do better than they could in England , and if they made fortunes they would probably go back to England to enjoy their wealth , but the Massachusetts Bay Company was more concerned with escape from England or with the creation of a society that improved on its better aspects and rejected the worse .
13 It was confidently predicted that some firms , particularly the smaller ones , would also go out of business as a consequence of the 1985 round of price cutting .
14 The newsagent where the girl worked said last night that both paper boys and girls would now go out in pairs , or with an adult , and only in full daylight .
15 When I asked Mrs Zamzam whether she would really go back to Palestine if the frontier was opened , she did not hesitate .
16 So effortlessly in fact that he would often go off during working hours with his gun to bag a pheasant or a hare rash enough to have entered our grounds .
17 If like I hated you I would n't go up to Lyne and start slagging you off .
18 They would n't go over to Birmingham .
19 Mm I would n't I would n't go in to Armada Close I do n't think .
20 Despite taking home around half his £300-a-week mining wage , Martin said : ‘ I would n't go back to Silverhill now if they asked me to .
21 He would n't go back to bed .
22 I promised Marie I would n't go out with Fullblast again .
23 That did not mean that it would n't go out in style .
24 Another would sometimes go back to work er if their son or dau well mainly the sons went to university and they needed the extra money for that .
25 These more loyal long service employees had an intuitive feeling that the division would ultimately go out of business in the UK if it continued to operate in the way it had behaved over the previous ten years .
26 Clare was devastated and swore that she would never go back to school again .
27 you know , where I belong , I , I do n't quite honestly do n't really like Harlow New Town any more , I al I did up until about oh eight or nine years ago I thought it was a great place and all , all the cockneys that said , you know , oh I 'd love to be back in London , I thought they were barmy , you know to live in London the di the difference is , I mean my husband 's a cockney and he would n't , would never , well now he would never go back to London you know , it 's a dump , he , he likes Harlow , but er I think I do n't like it now because it 's expanded so much , you know when we , when we were first here , mind you when we first moved in it was ever so difficult for us kids because , there , there was the Old Town kids versus the New Town kids and they hated us , they really
28 I ca n't stand going in a , you see , that 's one of things I would never go out to dos for cos I
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