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

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1 If they thought er well I 'd better go round just in case and she might need something or she might she might just want to talk or whatever you know .
2 ‘ I 'd better go round there and apologise right away . ’
3 ‘ I think you 'd better go indoors now , ’ he said , as gently as a mother .
4 I think we er better go today then , do n't you ?
5 Suppose we better go back home !
6 ‘ I think I 'd better go back now , Ben , ’ she said .
7 And we 'd better go back now .
8 She 'd better go down quickly before he started to get suspicious .
9 ‘ If you want to run that video and get to bed before daybreak we 'd better go down now . ’
10 ‘ We 'd better go in anyway or we 'll end up having to sit in the shade for the rest of the week . ’
11 You 'd better go home again . ’
12 ‘ Well you 'd better go home then and get your tomato ketchup . ’
13 We better go home then said Bill but we shall come back here again .
14 Sometimes he would last out until the end of Newsnight , and other nights it would be earlier when he said , ‘ I think I 'd better go home now . ’
15 I 'd better go home now , Mrs Hurst . ’
16 You had better go home now before it gets too late .
17 We 'd better go now otherwise in a rush .
18 In these conditions , the type of homosexuality that is mediated through pop music can only go just so far : in a perfect paradigm , Frankie Goes to Hollywood exploited the gay image of lead singers Paul Rutherford and Holly Johnson — for ‘ Relax ’ — and then dropped it like a hot potato as soon as another marketing device — this time , nuclear war became available for ‘ Two Tribes ’ .
19 It ca n't go on for ever because characters such as the Fat Slags ( right ) can only go on so long before the joke starts to wear thin .
20 To take an obvious case , modern manufacturing industries can only go on so long as there are capitalists and workers .
21 Although an operation on his upper jaw at Leicester Infirmary in about 1882 had removed most of the bony ‘ trunk ’ protruding from his mouth , his appearance was so repulsive that he could only go outside heavily disguised in a long black cloak , a peaked cap , and a mask .
22 The party could only go as far as the unions would allow and their influence was apparent at all levels .
23 ‘ We will only go as far as suggesting some of the market leaders like Sage and Pegasus , then we let the customers decide ’ .
24 Teddy refuses to be drawn on his early life and will only go as far back as the Biggin Hill Air Fair of June this year when Anita and Bob Armstrong ‘ adopted ’ him .
25 Some of the migrants may only go as far as southern Europe .
26 And you could only go as far as the money would go , could n't you ?
27 They can only go down now .
28 Likewise it is smarter of the donkey to explain calmly that it can only go so fast , than to keep trying to bite its owner .
29 Grammar , as I pointed out in the preceding chapter , can only go so far .
30 Sanitary legislation could only go so far in monitoring personal health ; what was vital was a popular campaign stressing the individual 's own responsibility to observe the rules of health .
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