Example sentences of "[be] [adv] to go [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Pencils are snapped in two so there are more to go round .
2 ‘ Now , Faye says I 'm just to go ahead , ’ Miranda said crisply , a fortunate intrusion on Belinda 's too-circular thoughts .
3 Bend right , be already to go out
4 So I 'd be best to go back
5 I could see , moreover , that if I were quickly to go outside and conceal my person behind the large rhododendron bush beside the path , it would not be long before Mr Cardinal came by .
6 Rain saw they were still to go on pretending Foucard and Denis understood no English .
7 If all the seats were taken , then my only options were either to go outside , or kneel , as though in prayer .
8 The other alternative is just to go off in that corner over there .
9 It 's just to go up .
10 His inclination is always to go back to those he knows and feels comfortable with .
11 We 'll just say the water is still to go in .
12 The second phase of the dye house operation to install a £400,000 Longclose package Dyeing Machine — the twin of the one already installed last year , is also to go ahead with delivery expected in October .
13 But to call it ‘ presidential ’ is both to go too far and to dignify it .
14 Many of us may wonder why it has taken so long to achieve the last two objectives , but I am delighted that the proposal is now to go ahead .
15 And this is why I think the approach that Harrogate would perhaps be thinking of and we ourselves would be thinking of if this is the way we wanted to go is simply to go out and get a site and get planning permission on it .
16 Erm is almost to go back so that I do n't know who 's on the course but Jayne 's course for example ,
17 If you start at the bottom there 's nowhere to go down .
18 Travelling the trail , as in numberless journey Westerns from Stagecoach to Red River , is still the game , but there 's nowhere to go now except to a pointless death .
19 He had arrived in the late afternoon of a perfect summer 's day , was shortly to go off to the Alps and then the Himalayas and had not touched rock for a couple of years , so the urge for activity was upon him .
20 Now when you say right across , I mean you you 've ta seen the photos of , of er shell pitted ground with the nineteen fourteen eighteen war , well that 's how Bentley was then cos it had been rooted for coal and nineteen twenty six strike everybody got it all out cos there was a lot of top surface coal , course it was just left there was a lot of mole holes , stuff from the furnaces when they tip tipped the slag , it was up and down and there was Buttons Brook , was n't it Buttons Brook across there , called Buttons Brook there was a pool across there called Leg of Lamb but I mean it , it er you can imagine what I 'm trying to say , what the ground was like to go over in pitch black night , to go over there and we went out and course we was issued with er ammunition which was one of the o only times I can remember when we went really out prepared with live ammunition , and er we scouted and scouted till daybreak and we did n't find nothing .
21 When she came home , it was usually to go out again : the boys had appointments with the dentist , the orthodontist , games with Little League , Scout meetings , Clark had violin lessons , Normie , trumpet lessons .
22 Erm well it was , it was really to go through erm just to , to give you a face so that you 've got someone to contact
23 If their giro did n't come , erm the only way of of contacting D H S S , was either to go down , or to walk all round until they could find a telephone to do it .
24 My mother came up to London the very next day and told me that I was never to go home again , I was never to contact Sarah again and , above all , I was never , ever to see John again .
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