Example sentences of "[adv] go [adv] with the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He found it and obviously felt at ease enough to go ahead with the appointment , ’ said Mr King .
2 Then , after dealing with the Grand Slam Cup and explaining how he only went along with the idea after insisting that the event would also produce $2m for the development of the game in ‘ third world tennis countries , he went on :
3 Then the buyer lost money because of the Gulf crisis , and the price of land was falling so he chose not to go through with the contract .
4 But Teesside Crown Court was told both brothers changed their minds and tried to persuade McEvoy not to go through with the burglary .
5 Their parents spent three years contemplating whether or not to go through with the separation , which was at first thought impossible because of the degree to which the girls were joined .
6 I did not like the prospect of playing in front of all these people who were all older than me and would see my violin playing from a critical view , but I had come this far , and it would be stupid not to go through with the audition .
7 However , she finally decided not to go ahead with the lawsuit .
8 Further , the defendant does not have the option of minimising the cost by deciding not to go ahead with the case !
9 Prosecutors agreed not to go ahead with the case , in return for Chieke pleading guilty to separate , less serious matters , for which he is now serving 12 years in prison .
10 ‘ I said you were crazy not to go along with the Corporation 's proposals , did n't I ?
11 Secondly , the new weapons would encourage mutual disarmament in Europe by persuading the Soviet Union to withdraw the SS-20s in return for not going ahead with the cruise devices .
12 Often the buyer will exercise both remedies at once , i.e. will reject the goods and will also indicate that he is not going on with the contract , e.g. by demanding his money back .
13 Eventually , either Mr Smith or Mr Jones had remarked : ‘ Are we not going on with the journey ? ’
14 I 'm not going on with the lecture if they 're going to play their childish little games in here . ’
15 I was emotionally devastated , but I was not going back with the intention of finding a man to take care of me , to pay my bills , to embellish me and play papa as Helmut had .
16 When he first advocated these ideas Hare largely went along with the view of most attitudinists that a correct account of the meaning of ethical language has no definite implications as to what moral views one should take .
17 Dinah had just gone in with the dagger to smear the sleeping servants with blood .
18 ‘ It 's a case at the moment that I can not go ahead with the case because I can not afford £700 , ’ said Barbara .
19 Anchor have said they will not go ahead with the project without a liquor licence .
20 But look a little more deeply and you will see that something else has happened too ; if a number of people have gone down with the cold , does not it mean that a number of people have not gone down with the cold ?
21 ‘ Why not just go ahead with the funeral ? ’
22 It usually goes along with the claim that the ‘ technical ’ division of labour , i.e. the actual distribution of tasks , is in some sense subordinate to the social division .
23 LUCKY to be alive skydiver Terry Wakenshaw vowed yesterday to go on with the sport which killed his girlfriend and almost claimed his life .
24 But the Reagan administration may still go ahead with the road , once protests from environmentalists have died down .
25 He also went along with the Bowlby theory to the extent of discouraging mothers from working : ‘ the extra money she might earn or the satisfaction she might receive is not so important after all . ’
26 Fortunately most old people are all in favour of precautions of any kind , and if , in addition , you can tell her truthfully that you have just such a ‘ hospital case ’ packed for yourself at home , for an emergency , she will probably go along with the idea very willingly .
27 The Senate will probably go along with the conference 's wishes .
28 ‘ They damn near went up with the balloon , ’ he said .
29 In fact , contrary to a persistent theme in neoclassical economics , competition between giant ‘ dominant firms ’ is often fiercer than the competition between small enterprises in unconcentrated markets : increasing scale often goes along with the development of a keener rationality of profit .
30 Whether Polaris is credible is a moot point , but we are now going ahead with the expenditure of £10,000 million on Trident .
  Next page