Example sentences of "[noun] go [adv prt] to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 You skirt Godinton Park to go on to Great Chart .
2 And literacy is not the end of the road : there is the added incentive that those adults who can read and write now have the opportunity to go on to higher education through a special rural matriculation scheme .
3 If we could be certain ( as we ought ) that every person of 16 had the opportunity to go on to further education or practical , examinable work , then we could drop the 16+ examination without loss , and with a possible simplification of the school curriculum up to that point .
4 No longer did a sixth former of limited means need to win a scholarship to go on to higher education : admission secured a grant from the Local Authority .
5 As the throng of workers laughed and joked , tucking into the vast amount of food laid out before them , Annie 's mind went back to other Mell Suppers and not for the first time , she reflected on how her family had dwindled .
6 Odette 's weight went up to 17½ stone before she found the strength she needed to tackle her eating problem .
7 The Queen goes up to that girl with the eyebrows , and she goes , and how are you today ?
8 Once again , however , defensiveness won the day and when the Strathclyde Centre circulated forces asking them to co-operate in the venture , a decision was taken to withhold co-operation and a circular went round to this effect , suggesting the existing Home Office funded PRSU ( Police Research Services Unit ) and the Home Office Research and Planning Unit were adequate for the needs of the service .
9 As Heath went down to electoral defeat in February 1974 , the yellowing of the 1970 Reorganisation of Central Government White Paper was the last thing on people 's mind .
10 The existence today of a large Serbian minority in southern Croatia goes back to this period .
11 Well , the fact is that erm only at present only twelve some twelve and a half per cent , one in eight , of our young people in the eighteen to twenty-one age group go on to any kind of higher education .
12 But the result no longer has a bearing on the National Division Two relegation situation after Morley beat Newcastle Gosforth on Saturday to go clear of trouble , while West have forfeited the chance to go up to National Division One as champions , settling for second spot and promotion .
13 But this bearing goes up to this price .
14 As it got closer , its lights went up to full beam .
15 J. went off to another station at one point for a two week course on shoe repairing and general leatherwork — not that he was thinking of setting up in business as a cobbler , but figuring that a free training on any practical skill was worth having .
16 Yeah , cos Michael 's name went off to that batch that was sent out .
17 One in four young people goes on to higher education ; at the beginning of the 1980s , it was only one in eight .
18 Gascoigne went up to each player in the dressing-room before the kick-off , roughly shook him , and demanded he die for the club and the cause .
19 Despite being buoyed by the attendance of a West German delegation mandated to support the establishment of a supranational federal authority , the federalist argument went down to decisive defeat .
20 ( All Mongolian-Soviet trade went over to hard currency and world prices from January 1991 , following talks in November 1990 . )
21 A fast-growing proportion of young people go on to higher education ; and we want to see that proportion rise still further .
22 As people go back to normal life , we 're left with the consequences .
23 The gardens of the Manor Road houses went through to one side of Fair View Road and my cousin pointed out a Nissen Hut in one of them as the garage rented by Mr. Rogers where the fateful taxi had been kept .
24 But Irina Rodnina went on to ever-greater skating heights with new partner Alexander Zaitsev , whom she wed in 1975 .
25 It will only be the fourth year before the accounts go back to independent examination .
26 The ratio of boys to girls going on to further education was 50 per cent in 1925 , and 63 per cent in 1978 .
27 Such a dramatic decline made possible an improvement in the opportunity index , the measure of the percentage of all eleven-year-old children going on to secondary education .
28 It had been reported by the colliery official and er the colliery manager of the time thought it was n't even important enough to actually stop men going in to that district to work .
29 In the latter , emphasis was placed on practical skills such as technical drawing and woodwork , with some pupils going on to some form of technical college but with most leaving at 15 years of age and few if any achieving university entrance .
30 And the pensioners go down to this bungalow free , and it 's in lovely spot and we gave something like two thousand pound for it .
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