Example sentences of "[vb base] go along with " in BNC.

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1 ( 1986 ) and Borgman ( 1980 ) have found from their studies that older children especially are not willing to move to a new family if contact with their biological families is to be severed , though of course some children may be unable to voice their reluctance and tend to go along with the plans .
2 Androgyny was expect to go along with a broad , flexible and effective repertoire of behaviours , and well-adjusted emotions .
3 ‘ Doctor , you fail to go along with my charade .
4 He uses the music to suck you in , then you sort of pull back in horror at what you 've gone along with . ’
5 But they 've gone along with it without recognising that there will be a cost and members opposite have consistently criticised the European parliament for having a number of buildings from which to operate .
6 It always looks as if I 've gone along with a sort of scalpel at the bottom of the letters as well , a sort of shaved off
7 Up to a point you have to go along with them .
8 If you 've got bigger muscles and the will to use them , the others have to go along with you .
9 ‘ You have to go along with this .
10 Absolutely , you see the sad thing is that Simon has a seven point five five average erm we sort of balance that out , you know , erm Simon to go and bring in a six point National League boy — it 's not a clever situation at all in my book , but then the rules are the rules and we have to go along with it .
11 They refuse to go along with the current vogues to which the impressionable Continentals pander .
12 Of course , not every would-be escaper would be deterred by the fear of a harsher sentence , but even now some prisoners refuse to go along with escape or mutiny plans due to fear of the consequences .
13 Some churchmen have gone along with the new permissiveness by conceding that as long as two people love each other that is all that really matters .
14 You have gone along with the County Council , they want to move what they conceive to be an inset boundary .
15 I I asked the er the minister earlier about this question and I appreciate his difficulties being a home office minister rather than a foreign office minister and I quite understand his reluctance to er stray too far from his departmental portfolio but the reality is that the British government agreed that the European parliament should continue to meet in Strasbourg but we 've heard nothing from the minister as to where the money should come from er in order to make that commitment a reality because I 'm sure that every member opposite would say that the uncertainty about the present boundaries is not the er responsibility of the British government , that it 's a matter for the French government to sort out which boundaries er will be in place in the United Kingdom by June the ninth , the date of the European elections , but the reality is that the British government have gone along with the arrangement for having Strasbourg recognised as a er seat for the European parliament .
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