Example sentences of "was n't go " in BNC.
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1 | But no ; their Christianity was n't goin' to go that far . ’ |
2 | Well , not being that kind of a girl , I was n't goin' to stay there with me virtue in danger . ’ |
3 | She said she told Ernie what she told Frank Galloway an' Ernie said 'e was n't goin' ter get involved , an' she should send the vicar round ter sort Galloway out . |
4 | I told my 'Arold I was n't goin' in no wooden seats . |
5 | Yeah , oh it was predictable that was n't go to work . |
6 | ‘ So you was n't gone away long , the pair of you , was you ? ’ |
7 | ‘ And one of the conditions of her bail was that she was n't to go anywhere near Times Square until her case went to court , ’ Carmen said . |
8 | Said that I was n't to go to the Lab this morning because Mrs. Schofield wanted me over at Leamings particular . |
9 | ‘ I was n't going to tell them , Arthur . |
10 | Bridget looked slightly bemused by the whole thing but was n't going to argue . |
11 | Whatever it meant she was n't going to think about it . |
12 | Olive was n't going to admit it but she was finding it hard to identify with the Moroccans . |
13 | I stroked him , he gave me a big lick , and I could see relief sweep over him knowing I was n't going to hit him . ’ |
14 | ‘ I knew I was n't going great but I thought I 'd score 8,200-8,300 . |
15 | POWELL : Ah , ah , I , I am saying in addition that that either meant that the thing was going to be vetoed anyhow by the Falkland Islanders , and that therefore even if Britain wanted to get rid of , of sovereignty , she was n't going to get rid of it in terms of her own statement ; or that the Falkland Islanders were going to be put under so much pressure , ah — we need n't go into the details of what is meant in those connections , by pressure ; I 'm sure the Foreign Office will supply the details if requested — ah , would be put under so much pressure that eventually they would collapse and give way . |
16 | That got home to him He certainly was n't going to miss the chance of making a few bob out of someone with money to spend . |
17 | I was told that there was n't going to be any nonsense like last time . |
18 | Like most at the top of the business , Reitzle was n't going to go on the record either openly praising or criticising Giugiaro . |
19 | I was n't going to say nothing till the others had gone , but it 's a real grand job that record-player . |
20 | Wexford certainly was n't going to embark on a sabbath day 's journey to Sewingbury , and now they had mucked up the Kingsbrook Road with those flats , there was no longer any point in going there . |
21 | She was n't going to waste her strength . |
22 | I was n't going to hurt it or nothing — I was just going to stroke it , but it flew off anyway . |
23 | Although Gaumont-British also declared a loss in 1937 , of £98,000 , Balcon 's departure from the company was precipitated by the prospect of Maxwell , a man whose production philosophy he abhorred , taking a stake in the company , and a general sense that he was n't going to be able to continue the same broad-based production policy as before . |
24 | If all the subsequent television and newspaper interviews are to be believed , the boy Lawson told Mrs Thatcher that he jolly well was n't going to stay on as Chancellor unless she fired that rotter Walters as her ‘ adviser ’ . |
25 | I felt that this was a very brief phase and if I did n't cash in on it now , I was n't going to get the chance again . |
26 | I was n't going for his agreement or anyone else 's agreement — I was going for what I felt was right at the time , and as he 'd set me up as this person in his life , I advised him not to do it . |
27 | David and I were very close friends and if he was n't happy with what we were doing and wanted to change , I was n't going to argue . |
28 | Not that it mattered very much because he was living in my flat and was n't going to starve , but I said to him , there is only one way that you can make quick , ready money and that is going out in cabaret . |
29 | But he was alert and sparkling , his motor well and truly turned on by the presence of Catherine Crane , and he probably was n't going to go home till he , or Catherine , dropped in their tracks . |
30 | He decided he was n't going to get anywhere along those lines , or not yet , and went over again the details of when Hawick had last seen his fiancée . |