Example sentences of "to go [prep] a [noun] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Today by some bonus of chance they were being left there to enjoy it and had not been interrupted with a call for tea or to go for a swim with Dad who had just come home .
2 There 's nowhere for him to go for a bit of company — he wo n't go to the day hospital because he thinks they 'll make him take drugs .
3 We need to shift to the procedure that we would probably have and a tell me if I 'm wrong I thought there was a sort of general agreement without it being sort of firmly agreed that we were going to go for a format of subject specific reports still coming to form tutor who would complete some sort of general report , is that
4 I would n't like to go for a week in silence .
5 ‘ Well , perhaps you might allow me to go for a walk from time to time , instead of waiting around in the servants ’ hall .
6 Spurred originally by demands from the Navy ( for special performance requirements , not well catered for by the US suppliers ) and by internal security needs for faster information , Brazil had determined to go for a policy of self-sufficiency in the underlying technologies .
7 I sort of was a bit lost on me trig so that 's really what I want to get to go through a bit of trig .
8 The law says that British Coal has to go through a procedure of consultation before it can close pits .
9 Our own work found that one in three managers appeared to go through a sense of crisis in their late thirties .
10 You have to go through a sort of incubation period while people weigh you up .
11 Whenever we suffer a major loss in our lives — such as the death of a loved one , divorce , redundancy , miscarriage , children leaving home , or the end of a love affair — we need to go through a period of mourning .
12 From the president down , the policymakers have always appreciated that Germany was bound to go through a period of introversion .
13 Finally , you may expect her to go through a period of depression when she is ceasing to try to avoid the reality of her loss .
14 Under the new system , we want an increasing proportion of the budget to go into a pot of cash , which local authorities will be able to give out .
15 Peter Gilroy , deputy director at Kent SSD , said : ‘ Research shows if you leave elderly people 's needs simply with personal care and do n't take into account their anxiety about their home , they are likely to go into a spiral of decline . ’
16 In practice if you are back checking files and such like , if you find something that is current word which should comply and you find something that has n't been appropriately signed or whatever , if it 's easy to get it done yes do it yes , if it 's not easy to get it done erm , it may be , you 've got to use your judgement because I do n't want you to go into a lot of work , but it may make sense to make a final note we are aware that this was n't done correctly this person has been reminded , or
17 There was a canteen for snacks in the building but they preferred to go to a bar in rue Pigalle where an Englishman , Fred Payne , would dish up their favourite meal which was still egg and chips .
18 Those transistors are an essential element in West Indian life , keeping everyone who does not have the time or , more likely , the money , to go to a game in touch with what is happening .
19 Also about to go on a journey of self-discovery which must bring me back to my beginnings .
20 As a student on Imperial College 's petroleum geology MSc course , Mujadid had to go on a number of field trips during his year in the UK , but had not been able to buy suitable clothes for the British climate back home in Karachi .
21 They knew the RIC could n't be relied on ; they knew they had no hope of persuading the Army to go on a reign of terror ; so a new force with carte blanche … .
22 You have to go across a lot of water to get there . ’
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