Example sentences of "[adv] go [adv] " in BNC.

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1 He returned to it again and again , the good weather held and they were compelled eventually to go outside .
2 Marie Brown is happy to stay with HRT to avoid vaginal dryness , a symptom that rarely goes away with time .
3 Beyond this , character- ization rarely goes further than the creation of characters sufficient for the roles they play within the fabliau ; there is very rarely the slightest pretence at verisimilitude in the form of feigning that the characters have experiences beyond or after those of the narrative given .
4 Youth workers Kate and Mike want to make sure they 've got somewhere to go tonight .
5 You 've got somewhere to go now I suppose ?
6 Now he he 's got ta find somewhere to go so where 's the only p place that 's clear ?
7 That little faith went on to go right round the world and it 's here today .
8 Despite the unusualness of the situation , all goes well .
9 But we put in to go anyway .
10 The Company was not powerful enough to go inland and kidnap slaves , and had great difficulty keeping up its coastal garrisons in the unpleasant and unhealthy conditions in which they lived , but in any case , military expeditions to capture slaves were unnecessary .
11 But no , for Dorothea might ask if she felt well enough to go away , might start prying into her affairs .
12 My two daughters are lucky enough to go frequently to their friends ' parties , invariably attended by a dozen or so children clutching a present which has cost their parents between £3 and £5 .
13 He found it and obviously felt at ease enough to go ahead with the appointment , ’ said Mr King .
14 She was frightened and depressed when they took her into hospital for the operation on December 22 , but she was fit enough to go home on Christmas Day .
15 I tried myself this morning , in case you were fit enough to go home , but still no answer . ’
16 The next day Becky was well enough to go home .
17 Oh most definitely yes I , I 'd like them er i if they 're bright enough to go then er be very happy for them to , to go to university .
18 They were to stay on the alert for any soldier unlucky enough to go overboard .
19 I said what would I like to say , disgusted with the way he 's been treated , I said my father left intensive care at one o'clock on Friday , we was told he was gon na leave there at four o'clock to go home and have a meal and be with him when he went on the ward , when we came back , he 'd been moved , he 'd gone on the ward , he was plonked in the chair , his catheter was on his lap , it had leaked all over him , his dressing was hanging off and seeping with green stuff the wound on his leg was run all down over his foot , he 'd got no cover on his seat so he could see , Dave said they looked and they did n't look very bloody nice
20 He looked at his pocket watch , it showed 8.55pm , not long to go now ; he was in a turmoil of doubt , what should he do ?
21 It seems yonks since leeds were last on TV , the pleasure of going down the pub and getting tanked whilst being generally rowdy and watching the footy is a joy to behold , second only to actually going to the game itself … not long to go now
22 At the moment everybody is eagerly awaiting Crest 's Late Night Show from Crest ( of course ! ) , a group which has pushed C64 to its ultimate limits , only to go even further in their next demo !
23 Whenever someone has been ill in hospital and has recovered sufficiently to go home , usually the first question asked is ‘ Have you got a family ? ’ .
24 Perhaps Jeremy Bates , who with his partner , Neil Broad , were ranked sufficiently highly to go straight into the main draw for the doubles , might have considered the position of his partner a little more sympathetically .
25 ‘ Supposing she slipped out during the afternoon , perhaps to go home for something she 'd forgotten ? ’
26 Perhaps goes there ?
27 The delight at the judgment which was ascribed to John Hegarty in the July issue of ACCOUNTANCY perhaps goes too far in suggesting that there is now mutual recognition of firms within the EC .
28 The ‘ Chicago ’ human capital approach ( e.g. Becker 1971 ; also see Mincer 1980 ) perhaps goes overboard the other way , seeing observed inequality as simply the reflection of current investments in human capital and returns to past investments .
29 This does not mean that the person needs necessarily to go faster , but that they organize their time more effectively .
30 Better to go straight upstairs .
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