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

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1 Let's go on to the second category , the er the body language bit .
2 She could go on to the other station but she says I enjoy being in so much I use it .
3 If the play did end at this point , the real anticlerical joke would be that the Interludium does not go on to the successful trick as the audience might have expected and the clerk might have hoped .
4 Of these 95 had been declared admissible and , if no negotiated settlement could be reached by the Commission , would go on to the European Court of Human Rights , which had issued 25 judgments in 1989 .
5 Mother used to come too , although she was chapel , and then we would go on to the Methodist service in the evening .
6 Erm Let's go on to the next question now about erm Just wondering what what on what cir under what circumstances , the police get involved in domestic disturbances on the flats ?
7 You do n't go on to the next bit till you 've worked that one out .
8 She will now go on to the next leg of the Boots Customer Service Award — the district semi-finals .
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 Shall we go on to the next thing ?
11 Okay , well let's go on to the next topic I 'm proposing to cover and that 's communication in organisations .
12 On gaining this award , he or she could go on to the National Certificate ( level I ) .
13 ‘ He should have knocked the guy cold and not let him go on to the fourth round .
14 This means I can now go on to the fourth stage , a five day course in the Alps , before working for 30 days alongside a qualified guide as a kind of apprentice .
15 Right , can we go on to the open day ?
16 But er at that time there was plenty work coming in , erm there was , there was no need for us to be apprehensive , and so therefore we had to convince the management that in the best interests of everybody , having agreed that the scheme would go on across the whole spectrum of the workforce , was to move reasonably , you know , quickly through the various machine departments and introduce with a minimum amount of frustration .
17 How do they go on in the senior school .
18 Leith snapped angrily — and realised she could go on in the same vein until she was blue in the face and it still would n't dent him .
19 The Italian dirty tricks department worked overtime as Galvano 's management tried to scream ‘ no contest ’ , claiming a head clash caused the badly cut left eye that meant their man could n't go on after the third round .
20 From the top you can go down into the old crater via a scree slope which , viewed from the other side , looks impossibly steep ( ’ I 'm never going down there ! ’ ) but is actually quite easy ( the descent is 600ft . ) .
21 The toll in what will go down as the worst rioting in US history is incomprehensible .
22 Some of you are still without your costumes so if you could all go down to the municipal tip and see if you can flush out any dustbin lids it would be a great help . ’
23 We 'll go down to the next floor .
24 Why does go down in the first place ?
25 It 's almost equally inevitable that they will go down in the low income bracket .
26 If not I suggest it should be and , er , therefore if unfortunately the profits of the company did go down in the foreseeable future the salaries of yourself and your directors would be reduced .
27 Would n't be too bad cos you 'd go down by the Jolly Farmer .
28 At one end there are double doors , so that you can go in through the outer door and shut it before opening the inner door — which means there 's less chance of a bird escaping .
29 ‘ We did n't go in on the free travel promotion because many of the deals involved British Rail and we do n't have it here , ’ she said .
30 So then I decided I would like to be that I knew there was a job going on the electricians , so I thought well I 'll I 'll go in for the electrical side .
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