Example sentences of "[adj] to go [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ That 's how it is ’ , they answered , ‘ he 's due to go on such-and-such a date ’ .
2 An earlier decision by the same judge preventing the four from organising or inciting mass pickets at the factory is due to go before three appeal judges next week .
3 An earlier decision by the same judge preventing the four from organising or inciting mass pickets at the factory is due to go before three appeal judges next week .
4 British Petroleum is to cut 9,000 jobs worldwide by 1995 , in addition to 11,500 jobs already due to go by next year .
5 I think it unnecessary to go through those cases , or to examine the particular grounds on which each of them was decided .
6 The spokesman for the Liberal Democrats will probably agree that to go into further detail could make it less easy to get the type of consensus that we want .
7 Hence it is vain to go to historical consciousness for the truest meaning .
8 We were aware that , because of the Woolf inquiry , it was not possible to go into great detail into what happpened at Strangeways .
9 In this short space it is not possible to go into any depth on the nature of particular natural hazards but only to highlight those aspects relevant to GIS .
10 I would be surprised if it was n't still possible to go through ten years of education with only the faintest idea of what has been happening in the world , even your own country .
11 It is not possible to go in two different directions at the same time .
12 ‘ We 're sorry to go like this , ’ they told Mrs Dyson .
13 He talks as if I 'm free to go at any minute , and I 'm the same . )
14 Not only will they have less work to do on their limited company clients , but as the limited companies will no longer need to use chartered accountants , they will be free to go to cheaper unqualified accountants .
15 It is easier to go from small to big , than from big to mega-big .
16 Turn sharp right downhill and uphill to go through another gate .
17 The transformation to a ‘ post-industrial ’ society has further to go in some parts of the UK than others .
18 Only some large religious or political issue would induce people to take the very considerable step involved in emigration if they had any established position to keep them in England — younger sons , the poor , and those with nothing to lose might easily be more ready to travel , if they could get the financial backing needed , or were willing to go as indentured labourers .
19 but erm , I think I down by his legs , all this and erm , you know , its bang , bang its just like , its over in a split second , you do n't have time to be this , I was there and there nobody really new what was going on and all this sort of stuff , he was probably one of most honest about , well , one of the most honest little bloke more willing to speak about it , and he had this other one it was right you know like , er , well I 'm already taking further than I 'm willing to go on this course , what you need is , well look , you know , all I know is that we was first , saying no more than that , not willing to go .
20 But equally , in explaining observed differences in features of industrial relations , it may be more productive or apposite to go beyond industrial relations variables to consider explanatory ‘ factors in the social , political and economic environment ’ ( Shalev 1980 : 29 ) .
21 He says he will respond by asking for three , as a negotiating position , but is prepared to go to five .
22 For those whose scholarship he respected he was prepared to go to endless trouble , but to those whom he suspected of pretensions exceeding their knowledge or understanding he gave short shrift .
23 So strong is traditional archaeology 's faith in the uniqueness of cultural forms and the rarity of innovations that it is prepared to go to inordinate lengths in the quest for similarities in design and style .
24 Even Mary Vetsera has only one wish , to be possessed by him , and is prepared to go to any lengths to achieve that end .
25 And she was prepared to go to any lengths to get what she wanted — and almost always succeeded .
26 To fulfil this ambition he was prepared to go to any lengths , no matter how underhand or devious they might be .
27 The limit to which the RCM was prepared to go in this matter was revealed in March 1939 , when Grunpeter was told that his salary was to be held to £2 a week , a sum ‘ which will make it impossible to continue my work at the camp as resident minister ’ .
28 I ca n't give any guarantee whatsoever that we will , but at least we will try and if that were to meet with your Lordships approval , then er I would be content to go on that basis .
29 Lucy wanted to call after Charlie , to beg him to come back and to take her away ; this was all wrong , it was n't the way things were supposed to go at all .
30 I thought you were supposed to go round those , not
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