Example sentences of "[noun sg] goes [adv] [subord] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 They knew that palladium has a natural affinity for hydrogen and that if palladium is used as the cathode the hydrogen ions initially migrate into it ; as more and more hydrogen goes in so it gets under ever greater pressures .
2 At least half an hour goes by before the laibon breaks off to welcome the returning cattle .
3 The interview goes well until you give him a friendly pat on the back …
4 Now the system at the moment seems to be er suggested by the government that V A T should go up and those that really need the money will be if not wholly , mainly compensated , they will of course get another rise if the cost of living goes up because their pensions will go up .
5 The red switch there being right on the end when you depress that the play switch goes down as well .
6 When this happens , one can see clearly displayed just the convulsions and contortions the lava goes through as it flows : the bands are tightly folded in tortuous patterns .
7 ‘ I wanted to catch the way his mouth goes down as well as up .
8 So in practice the ‘ grievous bodily harm ’ rule goes further than the arguments of its protagonists would support .
9 Power Toolbox goes further than this , though , as you can define a set of buttons for individual applications , so , for instance , you could design a set for Word for Windows to do things like applying styles to paragraphs , saving files in multiple formats — almost anything you choose .
10 This reshuffling goes on until all four seats are filled .
11 The company , which employs 70 staff , say work goes on as usual , the fire was confined to a storage area .
12 However , in some respects Heath goes further than I do .
13 Since recall goes up as precision goes down , it is clearly not possible to achieve a system which gives full recall at the same time as full precision .
14 In the realism department this month there is Avigdor Arikha , who also lives in Paris but who believes in finishing whatever painting he has started before the sun goes down because the light the next day is likely to be entirely different .
15 This process goes on until you have about half a teacupful of ravel left .
16 Yeah , the social security goes out when you 're changing your baby .
17 Roughly , and somewhat metaphorically , we can say that something of the following sort goes on when successful communication takes place .
18 Yet covetousness goes farther than material things alone .
19 If the answer to any of these three questions is that the restraint goes further than required , the restrictive covenant is likely to infringe Article 85(1) .
20 The steepening of the lee slope by accumulation at the top goes on until the angle of rest of the material is exceeded ( AB on Fig. 11.6c ) , when shearing takes place along a slightly less steep surface ( CD on Fig. 11.6c ) .
21 But the issue of tangibility goes further than this : it is evaluative ; it says something about service products and service jobs .
22 It 's five minutes to showtime and a huge roar goes up as Ice-T announces the acts .
23 A chair is taken away and the game goes on as before until only one player , the victor , is left .
24 If a covenant goes further than necessary to protect the value of the transferred business , it is conceptually very difficult to see how there will be scope for exemption under Article 85(3) .
25 Another task force member , a young Indonesian zoologist named Jack West , added , ‘ Also if we wait until next year and the logging goes on as it has , there will be no trees left to keep the elephants on their trail . ’
26 ‘ One way , my life goes on despite my mother 's death ; the other way , someone else 's life goes on because of it . ’
27 For the locals life goes on until the race approaches … over 100 police are on duty … they 've managed to close the city centre for the leaders but for the tailenders there 's a real old jam …
28 Smith 's critique goes further because he also argues that , economically , military expenditure is a poor tool with which to attempt to stabilise a capitalist economy .
29 I think it 's also worth just bearing in mind that we 're talking about only one percent of the erm of the farmed land i in this county , we 're not talking about banning hunting in in er in Leicestershire , we 're talking about what we 're saying on one percent there are tens of thousand of fields in in this county nothing can change overnight , even if this er motion goes through because the tenants will still have the rights to decide , it 's only when you actually start getting to new tenancy agreements that you will be in a position if you wish , to start to change things and therefore I suppose at the end of erm , at the end of five years you might have a hundred or two hundred fields on which this ban will apply but you will still have tens of thousand of fields on which the , the hunt will still be , the hunts in this county will still be free to , erm , to operate .
30 Doctor goes on when one considers her potential life in terms of an academic achievement and marriage with a family , one can only say that without a shadow of doubt she has been devastated and her emotionally devastation will I fear , increase over the years , unquote .
  Next page