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

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1 Sprung-edge bases are the most luxurious , and expensive , as the springs go right up to the edge of the base .
2 And there 's another ten and we 'll just about fit it on if we go right up to the edge of the paper sort of leave one square .
3 you go right up to the bar
4 Sprung bases are the most comfortable as the springs go right up to the edges .
5 Then you go right down to the bottom of Road you cos that 's a dead end anyway , .
6 And then , if we go right down to the bottom , there 's a whole lot bracketed together against the .
7 Go on up to the cottage while I get my shoes on . ’
8 Go on back to the house , ’ he said , in a voice that suddenly sounded as weary as hers .
9 Go on off to the club , and do n't worry .
10 Harvey suggested Morris go on down to the party ahead of him , as he was waiting for a partner : he had no wish to take Rupert Murdoch 's shilling , but he was happy to drink his champagne .
11 said that conditions ‘ go so directly to the substance of the contract or , in other words , are so essential to its very nature that their non-performance may fairly be considered by the other party as a substantial failure to perform the contract at all . ’
12 ‘ And it 's not just the pace of the serves that does it , it 's also the fact that they go so close to the line . ’
13 Sometimes they 'd wake in the night , alerted by the jackals howling on the outskirts of the village , and they 'd nose open the heavy doors and go outside on to the roof , joining the other dogs in their chorus of barking .
14 ( Unlike some birds , it does not dive vertically into the water , nor does it pursue the fish while under water ; kingfishers are plunge-divers , who go rapidly straight to the target . )
15 She seemed to assess their position and then go quickly back to the carrion as if she was very hungry and sought to take as much of it as she could before the crows reached her .
16 This way I can knit the cuff and go straight on to the sleeve rather than gather the sleeve on to the cuff at a later stage , as would be necessary if I were using a 2x1 cuff .
17 ‘ It 's got a hard-tail , like my ‘ 64 , so the strings go straight through to the back of the body .
18 Turn right onto the road through Harbottle village and go straight ahead to the car park .
19 And while you go straight back to the hotel I want to buy some road maps . ’
20 whether he will be invited to lunch with Rose and Phil , and if not , whether to get a sandwich in a pub , or go straight back to the office , send out for sandwiches , and catch up on the plans for the Manchester Marina scheme ; and if so , whether to order egg and tomato sandwiches , or cheese and chutney , or some of each ;
21 In her confusion , one thing stayed fixed in her mind : she would clear this lot up and go straight out to the Lock .
22 I could come home from work have some dinner and change and go straight out to the hospital part of all this week .
23 I go up on to the headland where there are huge cliffs shot with crevices and water streams down the walls from melting snow .
24 If you go out shoving them off they go up on to the roof of the house , and as soon as you turn your back they 're back again .
25 By the time I find a room it 's too late to do anything except go out on to the balcony and gaze down at the still-warm street , the signs .
26 Aside from employing field officers who go out on to the streets , intelligence agencies gobble up an incredible amount of technically skilled manpower , simply to run their huge banks of computers , and large numbers of foreign-speaking translators .
27 Hold this position for a few seconds then let your shoulders and head go back slowly to the floor .
28 She could then either wait for the ferry , which was sporadic , or go back up to the head of the estuary and up to where the river was narrow enough for a bridge .
29 If we go back up to the corner of Rua de Carreira and Avenida Zarco and go up Rua das Pretas , we come to the Church of São Pedro which was completed in 1598 and then extensively restored in 1747–8 , when the front was altered .
30 Er I 'd just like to come back on three fairly brief points that er one of which was mentioned by Michael Courcier , two of which er relate to that , and were helpfully stimulated in discussion during the tea break , erm Michael Courcier , I think if I got him right , said , he did say we ca n't produce demographic forecasts for post two thousand and six but I think he was fairly guarded in saying it it would n't be wise or or whatever , erm I would suggest in this context , and in the context of , and I use the word emerging and I look for advice as to when emerging regional planning guidance , and when will be the end date of that regional planning guidance , I say we should be looking beyond two thousand and six , I say we can look beyond two thousand and six , and I would suggest we do it in the way of arrange , which would be highly appropriate way of doing it , not too dissimilar to road traffic forecasts , low medium and high growth , and if , to put the point simplistically , if we have arrived at a requirement figure of nine seven for Greater York for a specific period , if we were to either project that forward by five or ten years , obviously we could n't just simply go rata , but if you took a low figure and you halved it on the basis of the make up , the demographic make up , of how the nine seven had been arrived at it would be possible to produce a range , that then relates to the question of a new settlement , and the alternatives during the period to two thousand and six , and beyond , of that new settlement , and I go back again to the greenbelt , it is vitally important to do that in the terms of a long term defined greenbelt , therefore again in that context , I would say it is highly desirable , if not necessary , to revisit the periphery of York , it has not been examined in a local plan , it has not been examined in terms of environmental impact , with all due respect to the Greater York working party their , the level of analysis of those peripheral blocks of land was fairly cursory , on a limited number of planning criteria , if a new settlement is to be assessed alongside expansion of Greater York we have to revisit it in much much greater detail .
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