Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Such persistence is not easy because there is nothing to go on except the general hunch that there ought to be an opportunity somewhere about .
2 I had to go on to the usual horror .
3 It concerns me , in fact I was , I 've had a theory for a couple of years now , that what the Tories wish us all to do is to go on to the American system of medical insurance .
4 To go on with the utter silence or to break the silence , pretending nothing had happened .
5 With bottle feeding you have some choices after six months ; to go on with the original formula , use a follow-on formula or start boiled cow 's milk .
6 Lights began to go on in the dark houses , and I relished my melancholy to the last drop .
7 The rear window of one of the shops looked out over poor Mary 's deposited remains and Martin had to go in through the narrow entrance to flash his lamp on it .
8 She knew it would be tantamount to suicide to try to go in through the open doorway so she made her way cautiously around the side of the building , careful to duck low enough under the shattered windows to avoid detection .
9 Eddie was staring at her with eyes as hard as granite but all she said was , ‘ You 'll have to go in at the front door .
10 No need for us all to go in at the deep end . ’
11 It is a mistake , I submit , to go along with the Dominican Matthew Fox in denying the concepts of the Fall and sin .
12 They refuse to go along with the current vogues to which the impressionable Continentals pander .
13 In such an optimistic climate it was easier for national governments and interest groups to go along with the economic ambitions of the EEC ; it was not seen as a great threat to their own concerns .
14 What the Independent very badly needs is very solid professional newspaper management er to go along with the good franchise which it has created erm and a proper owner who can actually er do what all of us in newspapers have to do from times to times which is back a promising newspaper .
15 It is easier to go along with the false cheerfulness .
16 It is just a matter of how you can build up the Kuwaiti nationality to go along with the growing community in the country and we were just a developing country .
17 While Judith , Rachel and Karen are sure their partners are happy to go along with the little alterations they try to make , Zelda says that interfering too much can prove to be very dangerous to a relationship .
18 However , she was prepared to go along with the advisory teacher 's point of view in the sessions and reassured herself concerning her own fears by using whole-class lessons to reinforce what she felt pupils should have discovered .
19 ‘ The ambition is certainly not to go along at the existing size , growing by 5 per cent a year .
20 He dismissed the subject from his mind and decided to go down to the tiny lunchroom he ran for his employees , to get a cup of coffee .
21 The sister did not like this at all and called the paediatrician , who examined and decided that he ought to go down to the special care baby unit after all .
22 That I may be able to go down into the Saxon crypt of a cathedral , a tiny , exquisitely rude little chapel , where a thousand years ago my forefathers knelt in prayer , is a draught of pure oxygen .
23 ‘ She 'll have to go down in the fattening fields with the cows . ’
24 In the Junior Singles final John Nolan of Blackrock looked almost certain to go through to the British Isles Championship when he led Belmont 's Paul Daly 20-11 .
25 The first filter sends a signal to the second filter telling it how much to allow to go through to the outgoing side of our personality .
26 He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual .
27 If one of these groups were to go over to the other side — as the army did in Romania — the balance of forces would be altered .
28 We have been asked to give that up and to go over to the European Community system , with the European Court and majority voting — the shoe is pinching all the time .
29 Now I 'm going to go inside and get myself a drink , ’ he announced , ‘ and then we are going to go over to the far field where there 's a modicum of peace and we are going to look at these plans together , OK ? ’
30 As Nina Fishman ( 1980 ) has pointed out , despite the undoubted idealism and enthusiasm of committed trade unionists in these industries there was considerable reluctance among NUM members to go over to the National Coal Board , to run ‘ their ’ industry .
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