Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] to the [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'm not going to go on to the things of the brain because we are going to do them further down the list . |
2 | We 're going to go on to the effects of chilling and what damage does that do ? |
3 | Even Captain Kirk has stopped pushing back the frontiers of the universe boldly to go on to the streets as a cop with the unlikely name of Hooker , a case of Starsky being put into a hutch . |
4 | He had braved the bitter weather to go down to the bookshops on the Charing Cross Road not just for the chance to get some books — he could have bought them any time — but principally to meet Joseph Hyde and hear the latest news from Dublin . |
5 | He had screeched to a halt in the residents ' parking bay in an unimpressed Hereford Road , let himself in , banged on his own door and , keeping his distance , ordered Jacqui to go off to the pictures for the afternoon . |
6 | Obviously she 'd have to go out to the shops from time to time , but she 'd had her hair dyed black on the Saturday , bought a new winter coat and a large pair of dark glasses . |
7 | For them , he said , there was a need to go back to the basics of spelling , grammar , punctuation and arithmetic . |
8 | I 'd like to go back to the minutes in terms of matters arising which do n't arise under the the agenda items . |
9 | Well I 'd like to go back to the sorts of things that Barbara Bryant has been talking about . |
10 | ‘ You have to go back to the days of Brady and Hindley for an incident which compares to the horror . ’ |
11 | I wo , I would like to go back to the days of my youth when we at Hogmanay there was usually frost and and and ice , and er we used to celebrate it partly on skates and it was great fun when you skated perhaps a mile and a half out of the town , and er er had a lovely ice festival and then we skated back and we had |
12 | I mean we 're not going to go back to the days of the commonwealth and relying on you know , lamb from New Zealand all the time . |
13 | I share the view of the hon. Member for West Bromwich , East that it does not make sense to go back to the days of the red flag , but we must find a compromise between the passenger 's interest , which is the interest of the railways , and the pedestrian 's interest . |