Example sentences of "[noun] go [adv] [adv] [subord] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Most of these bars have live music , and all have staggered happy hours ( or is it happy stagger hour ? ! ) , so with a bit of forward planning we make sure your budget goes as far as possible .
2 The Anisminic decision goes much further than this and says in effect that A 's decision can be set aside by the courts if they disagree with his interpretation of the rules which he is required to apply .
3 Although some of the distinctive lexis of the London variety of Jamaican Creole may have its origins in Rasta speech , there is no clear evidence that Rastafarian influence on the structure of the Creole goes any further than that .
4 Nazi thugs burn down Sony 's Berlin premises : Chancellor Kohl wins big cheers when he says the perpetrators are just high-spirited hooligans , reminds listeners that German-Japanese friendship goes back more than 50 years .
5 But Eusebius goes much further than this .
6 And indeed the anthropomorphism of the sociobiologists goes much further than that since they regularly employ a language which derives directly from the ideology of twentieth-century capitalism : investment , costs , benefits are central elements in their vocabulary .
7 The Abyssinians could claim an uninterrupted succession going back more than two thousand years ; in Africa , only Egypt had a more ancient civilization .
8 Mr John Greenway 's solid work in the constituency was rewarded with a 17,439 majority after his vote went up more than 4,000 to 39,888 .
9 ‘ I wouldn'a go as far as that , ’ Reid reproved me .
10 I do appreciate the discount since CPRW is a charity and we try to make our funds go as far as possible .
11 The US Fair Credit Reporting Act goes somewhat further than this .
12 A police investigation at a school for disturbed children has been stepped up after claims of abuse going back more than twenty years .
13 Actually Jacobi 's work went rather further than that , for he also found a way of calculating the number of expressions as sums of at most six or eight squares .
14 Some amateur associations went as far as legal prosecution to prevent any payment or pro fit being derived from the activities they controlled .
15 The police are now also checking records of indecent assaults in Oxford , to see if the pattern of attacks goes back further than last year .
16 Critics , however , say that the boats go no faster than those they are trying to catch .
17 But his role in their problems goes back further than that .
18 In my youth ( many years ago ) I worked as a redcoat at Butlin 's in Bognor Regis and used to be House Captain of York where we trained teams of holidaymakers to go as fast as possible .
19 According to some journalists whose memories go back further than 1986 , there is less ‘ caballing ’ in today 's newspaper office , and working conditions militate a sense of common interest , common identity and shared concerns among staff .
20 As long as traditional media imagery , and so on , represents disabled people as tragic individuals , with no collective voice and with little access to each other , we can expect the activities of disabled people to go no further than personal complaint .
21 The bad feeling goes back further than that — because the England striker was himself red-carded after a bust-up involving Walsh at Leicester two seasons ago .
22 It is not company policy to go as far as this . ’
23 Baudrillard goes even further than this by suggesting that the whole of contemporary life is dedicated to consumption and communication in a way which has become wholly disconnected from meaning and content .
24 Mine go back further than most humans ' . ’
25 At the end of this period matters had by no means gone as far as this , for the growth of political parties in eighteenth-century England was curiously erratic .
26 But the significance of this terrace solidarity went much further than this .
27 The National Trust , Friends of the Lake District and the National Parks have put into practice many of Green 's ideas , but the extent of his plans went even further than these and might well be worth looking at again .
28 Although the concept of what we now call a black hole goes back more than two hundred years , the name black hole was introduced only in 1967 by the American physicist John Wheeler .
29 Will the Secretary of State confirm that the privatisation of the inspectorate inherent in the Education ( Schools ) Bill goes far further than that presaged in the schools charter and includes , under the guise of additional inspectors , the substitution of private money-making firms to do the work currently carried out , not just by local inspectors but by the chief inspector of schools ?
30 The problem of the uneven playing-field goes much deeper than those arising from non-compliance .
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