Example sentences of "[prep] go [adv prt] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 whether they were in favour of going on to a second cycle of review and reporting and if so whether reports should deal only with a particular aspect of the school ;
2 The chances of going on to an additional baby from a given family size ( ‘ parity progression ratios ’ ) can be calculated from past data for women who have completed their families .
3 Perhaps it 's the editor of Living Marxism who should think about going back to an educational establishment ?
4 It 's not much fun , you 're chained to the wall — it 's like going back to a medieval library .
5 It was like going back to an old friend , familiar and almost cosy .
6 ‘ Perhaps there is n't all that much fun in going around with a married bloke , after all ? ’
7 HAVING done all the hard work in bowling out for 158 a Bellville XI bolstered by four Western Province players , Scotland failed to score quickly enough in going down to a second defeat , by 13 runs , on their South African tour yesterday .
8 You can eat octopus dunked in ouzo in a tiny harbourside taverna before going on for a five star dinner at an international restaurant .
9 David Macdonald made a series of quota quickies before going on to a larger budget with the striking comedy-thriller This Man is News ( 1938 ) , and Michael Powell built a reputation as a director of energetic quota films before making his mainstream début with Edge of the World ( 1937 ) , about the depopulation of a remote island in the Shetlands .
10 All I 've got now is I have n't got ta go out for a main , if I 'm out just pick up a couple of bits for him when from Woking .
11 Yeah but i if you 're gon na go over by a hundred percent and you 've got people there working overtime
12 So where do they g Are you gon na go round to a hundred and thirty two and say sorry ?
13 But I would n't wan na go back to a thirty two A not really .
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