Example sentences of "[adv] go [adv prt] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 You have already defined what the worry is , so go on to look at the cause , list different possibilities for dealing with the cause and then decide on the action which seems most likely to be effective .
2 Palmer was looking to equal that — and perhaps go on to take the US PGA Championship too , the golden grand slam .
3 NOT go back to work next week .
4 This enabled me to put in all the words I consider legal and thus go on to win the game .
5 This enabled me to put in all the words I consider legal and thus go on to win the game .
6 They 've got sort of mind you they have their own training sort of regime as well , which in some ways is , means it 's quite good experience because it is structured in , in a , in a way to give you some training , whereas of course if you just go in to do a job then erm how much sort of training you get varies a bit .
7 Just go back to sleep
8 ‘ Not yet , you just go back to sleep and I 'll call you . ’
9 ‘ But she is an adaptable and intelligent girl and will survive this episode and hopefully go on to lead a trouble-free life . ’
10 Philosophers , and especially philosophers of art , who say that visual perception involves something two-dimensional usually go on to say that it involves something else , a judgement whereby we get from the two-dimensional to the three-dimensional , the world of solid objects at a distance from the perceiver .
11 They also go on to say that a lot of women deserve to be raped .
12 They also go on to say that his Norwegian charisma is just right for the nineties , an aura of realistic , if lowered , expectations .
13 Given the standard-setting qualities of the team 's FW15 car , which will make its racing debut at Kyalami in 12 weeks , there is every chance Hill may not only win his first race with the Didcot team but also go on to challenge for his first title .
14 Recent research has shown up a link between girls who have suffered from some ( often seemingly unimportant or minor ) kind of sexual abuse and those who later go on to develop eating problems .
15 Erm s so you 've now got the situation in modern times where people probably go out to work all day , come home at the end and do n't even know who the names of the people living next door to them .
16 Now go on to learn the other letters .
17 We now go on to discuss the three aspects of analysis listed above .
18 It was in part dissatisfaction with the methods of elite theories as well as with its conclusions that led to the development of pluralism in political science ; this we now go on to consider .
19 We now go on to consider the rather more difficult cases of fall-rise and rise-fall tones .
20 The Dragons now go through to meet red-hot favourites the Brisbane Broncos in next Sunday 's final .
21 Babies that sleep little and cry frequently often go on to become hyperkinetic .
22 He said : ‘ We do n't judge our progress by the results we achieve , rather by the number of players who eventually go on to play for the full Ulster side .
23 ‘ There they go again , tweedly-deedly , tweedly-deedly , belly-aching the whole bleeding night , and the toasted cheese seizing on to their plates like goddam glue , which I durse n't go in to fetch them ; and never an honest tune from beginning to end . ’
24 However , as women increasingly go out to work the possibility of conflicting loyalties becomes stronger .
25 Tim Duffy , European manager of US-based videoconferencing supplier Picturetel , believes that the links have now improved to the point where the service is acceptable to several European countries and the US : ‘ Most products we sell today go on to ISDN .
26 It will knock weeds out as they emerge , then go on to tackle persistent perennials like dock and nettles .
27 Begin your reply positively with the word yes , and then go on to describe the most relevant experience you have .
28 And because their partners are seen as naturally more ambitious and less compromising than themselves , the women then go on to describe themselves as lucky and ‘ grateful ’ if their partners make even the smallest contribution to household affairs .
29 We will begin by describing Broca 's aphasia and Wernicke 's aphasia , and then go on to describe other frequently seen forms of aphasia .
30 In group ( whole or part ) discussion , trainees should be asked to provide an ABC analysis of the problem and then go on to explore the main points of a possible intervention and the notion of response competition , punishers and rewards to weaken and strengthen behaviours respectively .
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