Example sentences of "[pron] goes [adv prt] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 End result , everyone goes round saying , ‘ Ohhh — Perry Como 's a lovely man — but his agent …
2 Secondly , I know everyone goes around saying it , but I did n't really believe it ‘ til last night , but the defence really are crap ! !
3 One of them goes round putting the chimneys on and the other checks the flue .
4 On a Sunday I goes out selling , and all I earns I keeps .
5 John Lyons , for instance , while complaining that ‘ much linguistic theorising is vitiated by the uncritical transference by linguists and philosophers of attitudes which derive from the cultural peculiarities of English and a few other so-called world languages ’ ( 1982 ) , himself goes on to rest part of his view of literacy , implicitly , on exactly such ‘ cultural peculiarities ’ of written English .
6 This is from one of the letters written by Shelley in Italy , which goes on to describe the painting of St Cecilia by Raphael :
7 Insecticides used for control are designed to have a residual action which goes on killing cockroaches several months after the initial application .
8 The breadth of this review , which goes on to discuss Sir Thomas Elyot 's The Governour and to conclude by looking at immediate reforms applicable in a modern world of ‘ industrial exploitation … ’ where ‘ local community does not exist ’ relates clearly to ‘ East Coker ’ .
9 It is this which produces Leonard 's startling use of juxtaposition , which goes on to become a disavowal technique . )
10 some 96 per cent of the spent fuel which goes in comes out as reusable material .
11 Some 96 per cent of the spent fuel which goes in comes out as reusable material .
12 But he protested : ‘ Nobody goes out to play badly and sometimes mistakes are made .
13 This transformational stance , she goes on to argue , allows the ethnographer to have a personal discourse on aspects which are outside the usual limits of the body or corpus of collected material .
14 As she goes on to argue , ‘ The pronoun ‘ he ’ is an essential part of this description . ’
15 Eve Bendall ( 1976 ) in ‘ Teaching for reality ’ states that ‘ … the major part of written answers to nursing questions bear little or no relationship to the nursing performance of the writer in 80% of trainees ’ , and she goes on to say ‘ … we are producing trained nursing staff who are ( through no fault of their own ) woefully lacking in many of the skills they need . ’
16 She goes on to say that the justices came to the view that the justice on the Friday had had no power to remand Mr. Bell in custody until the Monday , as the remand did not fall within the terms of section 7(5) of the Act of 1976 and that , accordingly , they no longer had any jurisdiction to hear the matter .
17 She goes on to say that she ca n't due to the oath made to her dead father .
18 She goes on to point out that " Nothing was more alien to the baroque than a puritanical attitude towards technique and material .
19 She goes on to link Gödel 's theorem to Alan Turing 's proof that ‘ no machine could … completely understand itself , I mean , tackle all its own problems ’ ( 88 ) .
20 ‘ While there 's life in her , she goes on raging . ’
21 In the first of these Leapor warns beaux to beware of Cloe 's eyes which wound , and she goes on to describe her friend 's musical skill :
22 Veronica Hanson describes the stages that the PPA proposal had to go through to be accepted by the Welsh Office and she goes on to describe how the county schemes are supported , managed and run now that they are in operation .
23 She goes on to complain of her exclusion from theological learning :
24 She goes on to represent the province at the world final of the Smirnoff International Fashion Awards in Rio in October , with the chance to win 10,000 US dollars to help develop her career .
25 [ She goes on to note that ] … the needs of squeezing religions into manageable units can easily lead to unhelpful emphases on the superficial , the external and the exotic on the one hand , or the conservative , the established and the institutional in religious traditions on the other hand , at the expense of such less obvious and less accessible factors as the profound interiority of faith , the mundane ordinariness of discipleship , and the radical reforming zeal within traditions which challenges them to continually renew themselves .
26 In moments of despair you hit hope on the head with a hammer , but she goes on breathing in dark , safe spaces , echoes and cobwebs/tatters of past desire , spent and perfect , swim through time towards you , reminding you of what was but is no more/splinters in the flesh/tiny mouths open and close and never get fed — not even scraps — nothing at all .
27 I hope she goes on crying until the time comes for them to wrap a shroud round her . "
28 She goes on to accuse him and the others of , as it were , defining themselves into respectability : ‘ They are not prepared to count as concept or understanding anything which does not involve speech . ’
29 She goes on to make a new life in Hampshire with Harry still remaining ignorant of her great change and her children , of which she is extremely fond , remaining unaffected .
30 Then she goes on to add :
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