Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] go [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | I 'll repair it as a favour if my plans go through . ’ |
2 | When we take breaks — when I 'm at home or on vacation — my chops go down drastically because I 'm enjoying my free time and doing things I do n't usually have time to do . |
3 | I 'm going under — it 's up to my armpits — it 's up to my chin — my mouth is under — when my nostrils go under then I 'm done for … |
4 | But my studies go on , Music GCSE is just one of the nine exams I take next May ( 1994 ) , then I would like to do ‘ A ’ -level music , and hopefully , Music at University . |
5 | Her shoulders go back , her neck straightens , the small of her back arches , she presents her best profile , as her own hormonal changes , mirroring your earlier ones , start detonating gently inside her body . |
6 | Its origins go back to 1970 when a specially commissioned task force of the National Heart and Lung Institute ( as it then was ) , was asked to look into the feasibility of a trial which would settle , once and for all , the question of whether dietary change could , on its own , reduce the frequency of heart attacks in the American population . |
7 | Its origins go back to the rediscovery of perspective in the Renaissance , and then to the architect 's drawings of the eighteenth century . |
8 | Its origins go back to 1939 when , due to the clouds of War , a decision was taken to remove the majority of Army Ordnance stores from Woolwich Arsenal and Dockyard to a new Army Depot to be built at Donnington in Shropshire . |
9 | ‘ An honest woman is above rubies , and an evil one — her feet go down to death , her steps take hold on hell . ’ |
10 | their trousers go down . |
11 | As its days go by , we are left to imagine for ourselves Sarah 's anxiety . |
12 | In Mary Barton the working-class heroine and her husband go off to the colonies to start a new life . |
13 | And their traditions go back much further than the mid-Victorian aspirations embodied in the Public Library Acts . |
14 | The question is , who decides where the shrinkage occurs and which businesses go under . |
15 | Most Eurocoinmunists are also instrumentalists , and their arguments go back to those of ‘ the renegade Kautsky ’ ( as Lenin called him ) . |
16 | There are other ways in which people go about recognizing socially this significant event in their lives . |
17 | The focal point of the assignment is not the software , nor the medium , but the skills and processes which pupils go through within a particular context . |
18 | What , their boyfriends go out |
19 | Some women are n't obsessed with the shirts their partners wear , and are n't utterly downcast if their men go off to play sports . |
20 | The heart of the book was a chapter on ‘ The Historian At Work ’ which I do believe was original in setting out the processes which historians go through , from discovering and analysing sources to producing written history at different levels . |
21 | Because the only way you do your job is to get on your honkers and walk round the pipelines and know where everything is and which are polluters , and which ones go up and down . |
22 | It 's alright Peter used to live facing them at er Malton erm he was saying about the Charismatic how long their services go on , it 's about three hours , but he said you know they take their flasks or they just walk out and have a break if they want to and then go back in . |
23 | Booth 's survey also had an influence on a similar movement in the United States , though its roots go back to the middle of the nineteenth century when a number of small surveys on the " dangerous classes " were undertaken . |
24 | The captain of the work party watched the woman and her son go in , then signalled to his men to complete the sealing-off of the cottage . |
25 | The school , whose origins go back to the twelfth century , has been moved to a new location . |
26 | But even in this tranquil part of England many of the ‘ open ’ villages had a variety of local crafts , distributive trades and small industries , whose origins go back well into the eighteenth century . |
27 | According to some journalists whose memories go back further than 1986 , there is less ‘ caballing ’ in today 's newspaper office , and working conditions militate a sense of common interest , common identity and shared concerns among staff . |
28 | FMEs prepared to advise defence lawyers seem to be in growing demand , and that is borne out by the experience within our group , whose members go out of their way to stress that we work as independent consultants . |
29 | Often they have custody of borough archives , Quarter Session records , and the registers of baptisms , marriages and burials deposited by ancient parishes , some of whose records go back to Elizabethan times . |
30 | Er they night go back to it then if they really wanted to , or usually there was a reason for it . |