Example sentences of "going [adv prt] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | If you hit your stride and get a rhythm going , you may feel comfortable going on a little longer than the minimum times . |
2 | Paul battered John after going on a night of ‘ louting ’ . |
3 | A load of schoolchildren going on a day out . |
4 | I do n't suggest that I think I should keep going on a year by year basis . |
5 | I thought we were going on a bit . |
6 | Well if you rung you could always say oh I 'll have to go cos somebody at the door if she starts going on a bit long . |
7 | We 're all going on a Summer holiday for a week or two me and you |
8 | like he does n't know if he 's going on a bit at the moment , he 's just wandering about , |
9 | All other things which are done instead of talking are a waste of time , are being used as excuses to delay the whole process , and will bear no fruit whatsoever , except the killing which is going on every day … |
10 | With activities going on every day and most evenings we hardly ever saw our two . |
11 | Mother , who was two or three years older , used to worry herself sick about the way he toiled , going on every hour sent in all weathers , and not stopping to change into dry clothes when the weather was wet . |
12 | If you 're thinking of going along to join in the fun , there 's something going on every day and evening until next Friday night . |
13 | Well it 's just the thing to keep the operators going on the night shift . |
14 | They also liked it — as did the other villages — for the spiteful inter-village competitiveness that lay under the seemingly innocent accounts of the Snead Women 's Institute going on an Easter outing to Weston-super-Mare , while the Quindale branch could only muster a local dried-flower expert whose crisp and solid arrangements , adorned with bows of florist 's ribbon , they could all have recognized in their sleep . |
15 | ‘ Their minds are like trains going along a track which here and there has a broken connection , ’ said the nurse . |
16 | Slowly , creakily , he talked , like a cart pulled by a wise old horse going along a rough road . |
17 | I mean , and we were going down every day to see her when she was |
18 | like , you know what I was like , all through school and me A levels I was still going down every day and everything |
19 | I would n't fancy going down no bloody motorway , hundred eight in one of them ! |
20 | Going down a sporting memory lane has enticed some 16 million people to pay their cable-TV charge to watch the fight . |
21 | On talking with her son Michael — ‘ Talking with Michael is like going down a water chute and finding yourself in the same swimming pool , very much at the deep end . ’ |
22 | You 've just forced yourself into a cab , which is going down a London street at eight o'clock at night . ’ |
23 | Under these conditions it is possible to reproduce the sight of going down a helter-skelter , and the audience feels it is falling , when in fact there is no movement at all . |
24 | Six of William 's friends going down a slide |
25 | GUINNESS is going down a treat in Sweden — at £5.50 a pint . |
26 | TOLLY beer from Suffolk is going down a storm among the wine drinkers of Italy.And ale from Tolly 's Cliff Brewery in Ipswich could soon be wetting the whistles of beer-lovers in Canada , Germany , Holland and France.Tolly bosses are celebrating after exporting 1,200 cases of their special Year Beer , Cantab , to Italy — and they have received inquiries from four other countries.Brian Cowie , Tolly 's joint managing director , said interest from abroad had initially come since the brewery 's name had been publicised on BBC television 's recent Troubleshooter programme . |
27 | ‘ You take the kid 's word and you 're going down a tunnel , might be a wrong-way tunnel , ’ Nick said . |
28 | We were sitting on water , going down a great , deep stream , and then I realized we were on a board — like that board in the field — all white and covered with black lines . |
29 | Going down a slip-road . |
30 | Clouds of dust swirling around and slowly being sucked into the middle — like bath water going down a plug-hole . |