Example sentences of "[verb] [art] [noun] to go " in BNC.

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1 My decision not to eat had been made on the spur of the moment and was based not , as I well knew , on the terrible beating , but on the pointless cruelty of not allowing the others to go to the bathroom .
2 With VAT on fuel bills scheduled for 1994 and 1995 , the strategy is beginning to shape up as one aimed at allowing the Conservatives to go for a tax-cutting Budget in 1996 or 1997 in an attempt to win back ground in the run-up to the election .
3 The response was rather disappointing but at least 40% of the forms were returned thus allowing the scheme to go forward .
4 Mr Justice Otton ruled that the government 's regulatory authorities had acted rationally and lawfully in allowing the commissioning to go ahead [ see ED 74 ] .
5 This left the Sports Council without a venue for the show , but the day was saved by Whitleys , the oldest department store in London , who volunteered the use of their third floor for six weeks entirely free of charge , thus allowing the show to go ahead as planned .
6 The family solicitor threatened to sue the council for not carrying out the panel 's decision and allowing the children to go home .
7 At the County Ground … the referee had to think long and hard about allowing the game to go on … the pitch was wet and heavy …
8 Under the new Dangerous Dogs Act , Cleo could have been put down , but the court accepted her owner 's plea that she had been deliberately and maliciously let out of a shed , and set a new precedent by allowing the dog to go back to her family .
9 May I urge the Minister to give sufficient funds to the Housing Executive to enable the work to go ahead without further delay ?
10 We are therefore asking the Sports Council for a grant of £1,000 to enable the work to go ahead .
11 ‘ It would not need to improve much to enable the meeting to go ahead , ’ he said .
12 The exercise was designed to make a student stand in front of class , sing his song and force each syllable out in an elongated manner so that it had a beginning and an end ; this , Landau explained , ought to enable the student to go into neutral , physically and mentally , so that tensions could be released and what was happening inside could be heard through the voice changes .
13 Not only had we increased our self-awareness , but we felt content , happy with ourselves and we 'd also received the encouragement to go for the things we want — to seize the day .
14 ‘ proceed to a particular point ’ means e.g. to signal the driver to go from A to B or start a particular line of traffic etc .
15 We made the decision to go despite the lack of an organized UK presence — we are on-air with a new series running from January to March 1991 and we wanted to make contacts before then , rather than wait for MIP-TV to come around in April .
16 So we made the decision to go up Beinn Damh , not a Munro , but nevertheless a divine mountain of 902 metres situated conveniently behind the cottage .
17 Host surrogacy , I V F surrogacy was not done in this country erm so we ha we made the decision to go ahead as it was with partial surrogacy .
18 She made the decision to go out on her own because she wanted more freedom to pursue her many interests .
19 " There was some confusion at this stage because the target began to behave in an odd way , we knew she was supposed to go up the River Stour to off load , but finally I made the decision to go alongside her at sea .
20 And even those who do achieve something lack the scope to go further because ‘ Indians and India are the grandest failures in a long time ’ .
21 Where the boss 's response to a complaint might well be ‘ If you do n't like it you can always leave ’ , then sticking with a job you do not like implies that you lack the motivation to go and find something more satisfactory , or that you are incapable of finding anything better .
22 You could be very happy if you are not putting your enjoyment in second place or you could be making the most enormous compromises because you lack the courage to go alone on the sort of holiday that you would really enjoy .
23 I suppose my shadow calculated that I would soon come in off the streets , or perhaps he was using the opportunity to go through my baggage .
24 So you 're using the ruler to go along .
25 Radio Tanzania on Sept. 18 cited Diria as saying that both sides were being given the opportunity to go home and clarify their positions .
26 A few days later all the officer cadets were given the opportunity to go to Wolferton station to see the old King 's coffin on its way to London .
27 ‘ Marseille lead the group and remain the favourites to go through , but we gave them two goals of a start at Ibrox and still drew with the French on a night when injury prevented us from having Ally McCoist . ’
28 Once a consensus had been reached , it had no legal standing , but Citrine expected the chairmen to go back to their own Boards and secure acceptance of the common policy .
29 Erm , and therefore it feels it would be disingenuous of it to support the principle at this stage , it may well lead to a situation where were encouraging the County to go down a particular route , but only to get to the very end of it for us to pull the rug from beneath the County 's feet .
30 It 's at the top of Geal-Charn that you must make the decision to go back or carry on to Carn Dearg .
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