Example sentences of "go [adv prt] to [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Chairman I I wonder whether I could just make a sort of general statement from the department 's view before we go on to a particular issue if I may .
2 Successful applicants go on to a three-day assessment course .
3 He said he was to have met another man at a school on Garscube Road in Maryhill and go on to an unknown warehouse .
4 While your subconscious mind is searching for some final point to include in the margins , go on to the final stage .
5 It is possible to take a difficult route back to the line almost immediately , or go on to the next farm and follow a track there .
6 At the close of a moot the judge or judges declare which counsel or side performed best ; he , she or they then go on to the next round .
7 If this is the case go on to the next step .
8 Practise each one until you are familiar with it — and , if you can resist the temptation to turn the page too quickly , do this before you go on to the next chapter .
9 Also , I learned to appreciate that as a critic you say what you have to say and go on to the next thing in LA you never go on to the next thing . ’
10 If there is no response to either Stage 1 or Stage 2 , then go on to the anti- Candida diet , described below .
11 Even when the basic cause of a present-day problem comes to light early in the regression session , I never go on to the follow-up treatment during the same consultation .
12 Yes just before we leave however the question of what occur in my mind how you 're going to get from the present position in what appears to be a cost plus basis as we go along to a fixed cost basis and presumably the programme and I in in , are running as it were , are running effectively on the cost plus basis
13 If you go along to a good quality golf course they have the score card a planner but they also have a little script that tells you about the hole .
14 ‘ I say to kids , go down to the high street bank , see the bank manager and find out whether he 'll lend you the fifty grand you need to make this record .
15 I go over to the long mirror and have a look .
16 Ranulf watched his master and the friar go over to the far side of the room .
17 ‘ You need to hit the ball hard to get out but if you hit it too well , you go over to the other side of the green …
18 A lot of the tourists go over to the other side of the island , but I 'm afraid we 'll have to save that for another trip when we have more time . ’
19 Diode D1 is also mounted on a small heatsink so that its two pins go through to the appropriate foil points and the ‘ sink itself , which has solderable pins , is mounted vertically and fitted to the holes ‘ E-E ’ .
20 Shrewsbury at home to first division Wimbledon took the lead through Shaw after thirty nine minutes , and Shrewsbury , now managed by John Bond , go through to the fifth round .
21 In fact I 'm sure they 'll beat them at the Manor and go through to the next round where hopefully we can probably play one of the big teams like — Oh , Manchester United , Newcastle or probably — Oh , I do n't know
22 Darlington choir the Carol Andrews Singers have won the adult section of the BBC Sainsbury Choir of the Year Contest at the Tyne Theatre , in Newcastle and go through to the next stage in Manchester this October .
23 Go up to the front door and ask if Lewis is coming out to play ? ’
24 Go up to the front row and keep two chairs , ’ he directed and then left them .
25 the , the the green erm coats when they er , when they go up to the main school .
26 They go up to the sixteenth floor at once , not at all sure what they are going to do .
27 So , security guard came over , and if you go up to the next stop , bus , you could come in with them .
28 However , if you go back to a lengthy program after a couple of months you will find it very difficult to understand if you have not included any REMs .
29 Horns go back to an older world where surrenders were not accepted , to the dead defiant Roland rather than the brave , polite , compromise-creating Sir Gawain , whose dinner is served to ‘ nwe nakryn noyse ’ — the sound of chivalric kettledrums .
30 An assessment of those walls , banks and groynes , published last year by the Department of the Environment , found that ‘ many go back to the 19th century and so , not withstanding that over £2 million per year is spent by the district councils on maintenance , heavy expenditure on renewals continues to be needed ’ .
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