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

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1 They say peace , it does n't just go on the top two inches of the surface water , it goes right to the very depths of your life and keeps .
2 This lack of interest goes right through the educational system , In Ealing for example ( an area where a high proportion of the population is Asian ) not one school had facilities for teaching Asian languages .
3 Erm we 're not always privy to what goes on with the front bench , but yes we have established regular dialogue with Jack Straw and the environment team , in order that we make sure we are saying the same thing .
4 The Bishop goes on to the human eye , asking rhetorically , and with the implication that there is no answer , " How could an organ so complex evolve ? "
5 Our own sauces , or whatever , erm , if my mother makes a cake , it goes on to the top shelf , but usually we just use everything .
6 The ribbon of tarmac goes on to the lonely outpost of Leck Fell House , a speck of civilisation in a wide panorama that has no other sign of life .
7 The winners of the best gross trophy then decide , either by mutual agreement or by a play-off , on the player who goes on to the national championships .
8 I 've been reading Richard Hoggart 's The Uses of Literacy on this journey ; he goes on about the working class not being able to think " abstractly , generally , metaphysically or politically .
9 No , you can not prevent it from happening — but scientists are a bit nearer to understanding what goes on at the molecular level .
10 This sort of economic and social domination that goes on across the whole family .
11 Erm the two interact constantly and you can see foreign policy in some ways as a bridge between what goes on within the frame , the domestic framework of a country and what goes on in the international environment which surrounds it .
12 And much the same process of intensification at the edges goes on in The Spanish Gardener ( 1956 ) , where another little boy is prevented by his possessive and emotionally repressed father from developing his relationship with a gardener .
13 Having said this though , it is what goes on in the woman-only space , which defines it as graduated separatism or not .
14 erm There 's probably two-thirds of the logging that goes on in the tropical forest , which is about 5 million hectares a year erm is of that nature , so that the forest is left to recover after the logging has gone through .
15 Beckett remarks in Our Exagmination Round his Factification for Incamination of Work in progress , that Joyce 's work is ‘ not about something : it is that something itself ( Beckett 1929 and 1972 : 14 ) , and he goes on in the central part of his oeuvre , the trilogy Molloy , Malone Dies , The Unnamable ( 1950 — 2 ) , to create a kind of autonomy of his own — — as the Unnamable remarks , ‘ it all boils down to a question of words … all words , there 's nothing else ’ ( 1959 and 1979 : 308 ) .
16 We therefore found it necessary to look again at the empirical evidence about what goes on in the nuclear family — Who has the power ?
17 They are just as important though as what goes on in the main body of the conference centre .
18 Much of the work of the Department , of course , goes on outwith the physical confines of these rooms .
19 Most people do not wish to see what goes on behind the locked doors .
20 The last year has taught me how little I really knew about what goes on behind the wrought-iron gates of Buckingham Palace and the red brick walls of Kensington Palace .
21 Oh yes , I was gon na say , I think convincing is is another word that goes along with the general ambience of what influencing is about .
22 It goes along with the common complaint that there are areas and methods of serious investigation which are just not touched by scholastic doctrines .
23 Because she , she goes in off the deep end and you
24 The world of motor racing loves to surround itself in secrecy … what goes in to the automatic gearboxes … suspensions and highly tuned engines is more to do with science than sport …
25 The triumph of a new ruling class goes together with the eventual emergence of a whole new social structure based on the new mode of production .
26 ‘ Ah ! ’ she says , and then goes over to the other side of the shop .
27 Though Rivers gave some slight encouragement to Eliot in suggesting that even in our own society , religious changes have unforeseen and far-reaching effects parallel to those caused by the abolition of head-hunting in Melanesia , Eliot 's linking of ‘ cannibal isle ’ and that ‘ slick place ’ London goes directly against the main thrust of the book which stresses ‘ the almost immeasurable difference between Melanesian and European cultures , and the sharpness of the line which still divides them where they come in contact ’ .
28 The servant , a white-coated padder trained for the infrequent appearance of people like us , goes off on the long march to the kitchens .
29 Tony Hands of Colchester has leap-frogged above Harris in the rankings and goes straight into the main event .
30 Finally , in moments of vision the internal mind ‘ goes out into the external Mind ; they communicate through new kinds of sense experience — this is what the ‘ sublime ’ passages in Tintern Abbey and The Prelude are about .
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