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

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1 She could go on to the other station but she says I enjoy being in so much I use it .
2 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 .
3 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 .
4 Mother used to come too , although she was chapel , and then we would go on to the Methodist service in the evening .
5 On gaining this award , he or she could go on to the National Certificate ( level I ) .
6 He emerged with the trophies for Scottish Lorry Driver of the Year and will go on to the national finals at Telford in Shropshire .
7 He emerged with the trophies for Scottish Lorry Driver of the Year and will now go on to the national finals at Telford in Shropshire .
8 ‘ I will go on to the senior slopes , but not because I have anything to prove — to you or anyone else .
9 Right , can we go on to the open day ?
10 They could go down to the Sain Caernarfon League .
11 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 . ’
12 I even went , I was dying to go to the toilet so I thought oh I 'll go down to the big er and I had no toilet paper so I 'll go down to the big toilets and shower rooms .
13 Four finalists will go through to the closing contest on Sunday when James Lockhart and the ENO orchestra provide an operatic interlude while the jury is out for the final count .
14 If Elaine wins the regional award next month , she will go through to the national final in May .
15 Lennox , despite his anti-English position , would find it intolerable to be a member of the Beaton faction ; within a few weeks , he would go over to the pro-English party , his hopes of his marriage to Margaret , daughter of Angus and Margaret Tudor , and of English recognition of him as heir-presumptive , should Arran break with England , weighing more with him than the desire for liberty and honour expressed in the July bond .
16 I 'm gon na read from verse thirty five , just the paragraph there , the last paragraph in that chapter it says on that day when evening had come Jesus said to them let us go over to the other side and leaving the multitude they took him along with them just as he was in the boat and other boats were with them .
17 And at the end of the day he 's tired , he 's physically weary , and he says let's get away for a while let's go over to the other side .
18 But it 's important , for what we 're going to be thinking of this morning to re , keep that little phrase in mind that Jesus said to them let us go over to the other side , there was purpose in going into that boat .
19 ‘ I know , let's go over to the Windy Ridge , at Shepperdine .
20 If , however , the dance told the bees where to go , they should go off to the wrong place ( depending on where Gould had put the light bulb ) .
21 I said and that 's why cos Paul said to me , he said , I never hear you moan , I said look you wo n't hear me moan because it 's not that I enjoy the job I hate the job I said I hate the work , and I find it hard work but at the end of the day on a Friday , I know that six o'clock in the morning on a Friday I can go up to the Nationwide Anglia , slip my card in there and I know there 's gon na be a couple of hundred of quid in there with the
22 Let's go back to the other file er , I 'm going to put a range name in , cell zero one on that one .
23 So it was a case there , and course at the end of the day you rolled the little roll up , put elastic round and stood them up in a file and they stood there like little soldiers and you could always go back to the actual time , sometimes you found a man had n't re erm signed on , he 'd just gone and joined his bus up in town centre , well you , that was er subject of another letter .
24 After a traditionally disastrous dress rehearsal the director came into Arthur 's dressing-room , which he shared with Flute the Bellows Mender , and said cheerily , ‘ I tell you what , why do n't you go back to the awful way you used to do it ?
25 There was the man who had been with him and taken the briefcase from the hotel room and who in the morning would go back to the Golani Brigade stationed on the Lebanese border and who would be chided by his fellow officers for having taken leave while the military workload was intense .
26 But then it would go back to the usual music , the old pictures would go up again and it would be back to the black paintwork .
27 But maybe ye 'll be different , ye just want a taste of the exotic life and then ye 'll go back to the big time . ’
28 Even so , I would go back to the exciting clamour of Cairo tomorrow .
29 But if licenses for legal events are refused there are fears that raves will simply go back to the disused warehouses where the craze began .
30 So if you can go back to the original Hebrew of that particular verse then you 'll find out how it 's meant to be said , because a normal bible vision would n't read God 's in there , it would read equals and the name of the Lord , will be saved you see
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