Example sentences of "[verb] go [adv] [adv] [subord] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 He said : ‘ Once one group of residents goes , the others want to go fairly quickly because they can see their homes are being wound down . ’
2 we do n't really need to go any further because we 've found it 's not balanced but we just for completeness , how many Cs on this side ?
3 Sometimes I tried to go as fast as I could , but it was easy to let the sail out and slow down if I felt I was getting out of control .
4 You think everything has gone wrong just because I wo n't wo n't wo n't fuck you .
5 As the years unfold , the penny will drop in the general council of the CBI , as much as on the commuter trains from Basildon , that the whole market-based experiment has gone as far as it can — and the new need is for a government and policies that actively manage the instability and short-termism of the British economy .
6 In reaching 24 processor configurations , Pyramid says it has gone as far as it can with the R3000 .
7 These may stem from hormonal changes in the woman , from social pressures , from changes in marital or parental role , from career considerations ( especially in the man , who may realise that , at this stage of life , he has gone as far as he is likely to go ) and/or from other causes .
8 Well the insurance would have to go as well as I could n't afford to keep that going .
9 I would have to go as fast as I could while I could still see the way , and then rest for longer , and then probably crawl .
10 She has such a thirst after knowledge that the more she knows , I verily think the humbler she is , and I can not help letting go as fast as she pulls as my son used to do to his kite .
11 Since I ca n't dress the way I like , I try to go as far as I can whilst still making a feeble attempt at femininity .
12 It had to be done very quickly because once the tanks arrived we would not be allowed to go any further until they had passed through the city .
13 I 'm trying to go as fast as I can .
14 ‘ I feel that I 've gone as far as I can here , ’ Knowles said .
15 ‘ I think I 've gone as far as I can with it , ’ said Tony .
16 By the beginning of this century , however , the towers had gone as far as they could go .
17 I put it to Andy that it must have been a blow when they split in 1988 , but he , ever the voice of reason , says , ‘ There was no point in trying to keep them together , it had gone as far as they wanted it to go and they wanted to do something different .
18 Duncan looked at Myeloski ; they had gone as far as they could with the air-traffic controller .
19 The British opinion , for what it was worth , was that by no stretch of the imagination was Bao Dai 's régime in de facto control ( they also warned the Americans that Schuman would claim that the French had gone as far as they could in Vietnam without creating trouble in French North Africa ) .
20 He felt he had gone as far as he could in the company and learned as much as he was likely to .
21 He had gone as far as he could go .
22 JUST when you thought frilly knicker and bra design had gone as far as it could , Sherwood Group is set to go further .
23 When Miss Poraway had mentioned a Tupperware party Mrs Stead-Carter had gone much further than she 'd ever gone before .
24 She had gone much further than she had imagined .
25 So far things had gone much better than she had expected .
26 Sometimes there may be a timed section which is a few jumps and you have to go as fast as you can .
27 This a times course of jumps in a ring and you have to go as fast as you can .
28 It was then she remembered how he had once called her ‘ chicken ’ — the time he wanted to go somewhere else when she was under orders to go to the Moon .
29 I have gone much further than I intended when I set out on this report and am already beginning to regret the substantial breach in normal departmental procedures which this has involved .
30 The Principal wrote in November 1967 that the only recourse was ‘ to ensure that every possible safeguard should be written into the constitution of such a scheme ’ , and following local negotiations he considered that ‘ we have gone as far as we are able so far to safeguard the courses and attitudes of this College and we have confidence that the LEA are making every effort to ensure that Diploma in Art and Design ( DipAD ) courses and developments will be given the fullest support , and will not be undermined in any way by the Polytechnic proposals ’ .
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