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

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1 But he did n't want to go to the bloody thing , not after what they 'd done to the poor old man .
2 ‘ Do you want to go to the giving-out-food woman and say there 's three small hungry people down here ? ’
3 But they also wanted a lift into town and we agreed to go to the Hard Rock Café in Honolulu together that night .
4 MPs who on the whole tend to be rather casual about going to meetings organised for their benefit by pressure groups tend to go to the nuclear forum , because it is always well-structured and organised , and because they can then say to constituents who work in either the nuclear industry or the nuclear supply industry that they have been , and still are , taking an interest in the decisions that affect those particular electors .
5 and one day she said , Now then John I want to go to the other school to Mr , the schoolmaster to get a book .
6 Furious Tory MPs now want to go to the High Court to force a new ballot .
7 Hereford and Worcester has already voted for a similar ban , Northamptonshire 's decision only has to go to the full council , and Gloucestershire votes next week .
8 The CRE 's findings and recommendations are expected to go to the Scottish Secretary , Ian Lang , for approval and action if its inquiry upholds complaints that the region 's methods may be in breach of race relations and education law for failing to test in a child 's first language .
9 Apart from codifying the rights of the individual , a Bill of Rights would iron out the curious anomaly to which Lord Taylor referred and might in addition save time and money because far fewer decisions by British judges would need to go to the European Court of Human Rights .
10 There must be thousands like me who do n't need to go to the whingeing depths of Germaine Greer and her ilk , or spend time and money trying to look eternally young like Joan Collins and Elizabeth Taylor .
11 Yeah she always wants to go to the expensive places .
12 That 's why I stopped going to the Olde Tyme Dancing with him .
13 Scottish scholars stopped going to the English universities ; the veneer of English influence on Scottish law and judicial practice was torn away .
14 The hon. Gentleman is also mistaken because he has ignored the fact that in the past three years alone , £10 million of Department of Trade and Industry money has gone to the assisted area in west Cornwall .
15 The very small constituency of Westminster Grey Coat Hospital School has gone to the Liberal Democrats .
16 IBM Corp has gone to the Distributed Computing Solutions arm of General Atomics Inc , San Diego for its UniTree file and storage management software ‘ for use and distribution on the entire line of IBM computers , ’ although it seems likely that it will be confined to running under Unix for now .
17 Dynafit has gone to the Swiss boot company Raichle and Kastle is currently for sale .
18 The losses for the bottom 50% average out at nearly £8.50 per family … while the top 10% have gained nearly £40 per family … the bottom half of the population has lost £6.6 billion , of which £5.6 billion has gone to the top 10% ; indeed –4. – billion has gone to the top 5% .
19 The losses for the bottom 50% average out at nearly £8.50 per family … while the top 10% have gained nearly £40 per family … the bottom half of the population has lost £6.6 billion , of which £5.6 billion has gone to the top 10% ; indeed –4. – billion has gone to the top 5% .
20 A convicted armed robber has gone to the High Court in Edinburgh to ask that special legal powers be used to re-examine his case .
21 Among the items saved was a portrait of Lord Liverpool by Sir Thomas Lawrence , which did not appear in the catalogue and which has gone to the National Portrait Gallery .
22 You know when we came back the next Saturday as we 've gone through the front door , he 'd gone to the Little Chef for breakfast because there were n't any crocks left to u , to use
23 The last time she and Arnie had eaten out they 'd gone to the local curry house where they went about four times a year .
24 She laughed happily , remembering the pains she 'd gone to the previous evening .
25 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
26 ‘ The challengers have always had to go to the other side of the Atlantic now it 's their turn to come to England .
27 surplus there is , and then it redistributes that surplus and given that the , the , the priority is industrialization most if not all of that surplus is going to go to the industrial sector .
28 When we discussed it , it became clear that there is a wide spectrum of response to the whole issue of private care , that the response from within the statutory services tends to be one of suspicion , tends to be one of sometimes a fairly moralistic approach and this is quite at odds with the response we are seeing from the government which tends to go to the other end of the spectrum and be promoting private care as the solution to many of the problems of service provision and volume that are being encountered at the moment .
29 Would you like to go to the old rink to do some skating ? [ drink ]
30 She hesitated for a moment , then said , ‘ I met Sid Watkins in Berkeley today and he asked me if I would like to go to the Licensed Victuallers Dinner at the Princes Hotel with him tonight .
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