Example sentences of "[noun sg] go forward to " in BNC.

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1 From this , a lane goes forward to the last habitation , Dorusduain , with a parking space midway .
2 So these are the areas for the new monies being spent and as I said earlier as the economic development action plan is developed , it will be an opportunity to go forward to the th th t t to fund that initiative .
3 The win earns them the opportunity to go forward to the national championships at Hemel Hempstead in the south of England .
4 The first stage in the transfer is a preselection process , involving informal discussions with tenants where they may make their own alternative suggestions , which eventually produces a single applicant to go forward to the final stages .
5 At the meeting of the Staff Salaries Committee ( SSC ) on 14th February , no agreement could be reached on the recommendation to go forward to the Finance and Staffing Committee ( F&S ) on 5th March on the pay award for 1991/2 .
6 RELATIONS off the park between Rangers and their European Championship League rivals , Marseille , have deteriorated amid reports from Ibrox that the French side reneged on an agreement over tickets for the tie on 7 April that will decide which club goes forward to the European Cup final .
7 When the priest has said the opening prayer and the congregation sit down , the mime group go forward to the altar and all bow together .
8 A TEAM of Essex students will soon have the chance to go forward to the semi-finals of a national legal debating contest .
9 The winner of that round goes forward to the national final and stands to win £3,000 and the title UK Livewire of 1992 .
10 In third field go forward to waymarked stile at far end , keeping just right of slight rise .
11 North Road and St Bede 's will go forward to the finals .
12 In many cases , it is submitted that , after the process of filtration , there will be no " gold nuggets " left , that is , no protectable expression to go forward to the process of comparison .
13 What is different in the Banbury situation erm is that fact that you are not only talking about one school and it 's education because Banbury School draws not only it 's own eleven to sixteen year old children , who have the option to go forward to the sixth form , but of course all the children that come from the Warriner School at Bloxham , all the children that come from Drayton School , and a certain number of the children who might come from the Roman Catholic Secondary School in Banbury , so there are a whole lot more people involved than just the actual children , and that 's what made Banbury a hybrid .
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