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

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1 Because Xtradrive requires a device driver , which means that it is a system level device , bypassing DOS and the BIOS to go straight to the hard disk would result in the swap file not benefiting from compression .
2 From this , a lane goes forward to the last habitation , Dorusduain , with a parking space midway .
3 Coleraine started brightly with Cook and Brian Donaghy both going close in the opening three minutes , but the Crues settled quickly and were presented with a golden opportunity to go ahead in the 12th minute .
4 The win earns them the opportunity to go forward to the national championships at Hemel Hempstead in the south of England .
5 Unlike other countries , Britain does not allow the money to go straight to the local authorities to which it has been allocated .
6 Booking : At the moment , Crêchendo is London-based ( Putney , Fulham , Battersea , Notting Hill Gate , West Kensington ) and is heavily booked , but there are plans to go nationwide in the not-too-distant future .
7 The first stage in the transfer is a preselection process , involving informal discussions with tenants where they may make their own alternative suggestions , which eventually produces a single applicant to go forward to the final stages .
8 Although officials remain resolutely silent , there is a widespread belief that the British Government will authorise the colony 's administration to go ahead with the first batch of mandatory repatriations this week .
9 RELATIONS off the park between Rangers and their European Championship League rivals , Marseille , have deteriorated amid reports from Ibrox that the French side reneged on an agreement over tickets for the tie on 7 April that will decide which club goes forward to the European Cup final .
10 ‘ Yes of course , ’ said Taliesin , his eyes going also to the motionless figure , because it was certainly unthinkable that they should leave Fergus like this , in the middle of a dark old mansion at the heart of an ancient forest .
11 She looked up sharply , her eyes going immediately to the far shore and to the house on the crest above the cove .
12 Nevertheless , our surveys showed schools undertaking a wide range of activities in pursuit of home-school rapport and cooperation , particularly where younger children were concerned , and many schools went well beyond the obvious activities like information exchange , open days and social events to pursue more adventurous and long-term programmes .
13 ‘ Uncle Elias went immediately to the secret room and took out a box which also had three Ks on it .
14 To finance the Club went ahead with the proposed issue of 15 Second Debenture Bonds ( at 5% ) , each of £100 .
15 But the ramifications of the study go well beyond the private law of finance and property on divorce .
16 Hall , in fact , might well have won in straight games , as he led 9-6 in the opening game and then missed four successive smashes to allow Baddeley to go ahead for the first time at 10-9 .
17 Hall , in fact , might well have won in straight games , as he led 9-6 in the opening game and then missed four successive smashes to allow Baddeley to go ahead for the first time at 10-9 .
18 Because on the inside — yes , I have my airwells , I have work going forward behind the net curtains .
19 My gaze went frequently to the other bearer of that awful secret .
20 Heather went there on the tenth of September , you know , to see Rex Cunningham . ’
21 After all , both directors go home to the same address in two different vehicles , and the reasons for taking the delivery car home , on the facts , are more than valid .
22 Gore 's proposal went far beyond the informal investigation begun in May at the request of House Speaker Tom Foley .
23 I can feel behind my head the haze of reddish hair going away in the opposite direction .
24 More men were struck in the Dutch battalions , but most balls went overhead for the French gunners were firing a fraction too high .
25 This shift went well beyond the general decline of the traditional working class in the electorate ( discussed below ) and reflected the increasing selection of ‘ more educated candidates ’ with ‘ administrative aptitudes ’ under the conditions of electoral competition , and within the dominant technocratic conception of politics , which had held sway since the rise of ‘ Butskellism ’ in the mid '50s .
26 Three quiet days went past in the slow slap and plop of the river .
27 And we had two shields , we had two separate teams to go immediately to the two bedrooms which , in our er esti est estimations , that will be where any adults were more likely to be in the flat .
28 Energy fed into the turbulence goes primarily into the larger eddies .
29 The comprehension scales begin with items concerned with the extent to which a child associates a word or phrase with affective or situational meaning , and proceed to a point where ‘ ideational content goes well beyond the concrete evidence ’ — for example , ‘ The little boy has spilt his dinner ; what must he do ? ’
30 North responded and both Colin Christie and winger David McClelland went close to the vital breakthrough .
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