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

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1 The book now goes on to my sister and what happens next is up to her .
2 Failing to see this masked sign , a family out for a drive goes on to the crossing at the very same moment as a rare Leopold 's Toad , and runs it over .
3 The Pope goes on to Mauritius on Saturday .
4 In Los Angeles workers joke that the rush hour begins at 5.30am and goes on to 8.30pm .
5 I took the mid-afternoon express to Valladolid that goes on to Salamanca .
6 One in four young people goes on to higher education ; at the beginning of the 1980s , it was only one in eight .
7 ‘ As to the outside world , I now take just sufficient interest in what goes on to be thankful that , though I am deaf , I can vote . ’
8 The ribbon of tarmac goes on to the lonely outpost of Leck Fell House , a speck of civilisation in a wide panorama that has no other sign of life .
9 A major work in the field remains A Dictionary of British Surnames by P.H. Reaney , in which the relevant entry reads , ‘ Fursey , Fussey , Fuzzey , Forsey ’ , and goes on to instance John Forshay 1431 ( Dorset ) and Roger Fursey 1583 ( Surrey ) .
10 She has been voted the best assistant in the store by her colleagues , and goes on to the next leg of the competition , the district semi-finals on April 10th .
11 If you do not reply , the PP does not repeat but goes on to the next question .
12 We ourselves have found that if a patient goes on to a diet which is relatively free from pesticides , herbicides and chemical additives , then often the homoeopathic remedies work much better than if the patient continues to eat an additive and junk-food-laden diet .
13 The bungy cord is fixed to these and a safety rope goes on to the harness .
14 It then goes on to the Shoulder of Mutton Hill , noted for its flower rich grassland .
15 Crossing the road it follows a path across country to a small road leading to Ballagh Cross and goes on to Armagh Manor .
16 A great inducement of ‘ start-ups ’ or ‘ green-field projects ’ , where the original investors are in on the ground floor , is that they will make a killing if the company one day goes on to the Stock Exchange , or is gobbled up by a predator in a takeover bid .
17 The left fork goes on to the village of Glenelg and in a field between the two roads a gaunt ruin will be noticed : this in its eighteenth-century heyday was the barracks occupied by Hanoverian troops .
18 It then goes on to the village of Colton and the Trent Valley .
19 ‘ The one from Mainz goes on to Rome .
20 You may also need to lay on a messenger service to deliver the film to the newspaper building while the photographer goes on to his next assignment .
21 It goes on to Culworth , where it meets Banbury Lane , and may have proceeded along this Lane to the great markets of Northampton , where the cattle were sold in large numbers for fattening on the rich Midland pastures .
22 Having established his basic historical schema , Shepherd goes on to his most original contribution , an analysis of how the two ‘ world-views ’ are ‘ encoded ’ in music , in each case the musical structures and the structures of society and of social consciousness forming ‘ homologies ’ .
23 There are four essentially different things a process can do on its first step : ( i ) it diverges ; ( ii ) it communicates with its environment ( and goes on to its second step ) ; ( iii ) it stops because , even though it has not terminated , it can not agree with its environment on any communication ; ( iv ) it terminates in some state .
24 How was it The next section goes on to analysis section three I think .
25 This goes on to measuring erm training needs analysis .
26 Once the first grading has been successfully completed , the student goes on to the next stage of training , which concerns itself with basic semi-free sparring .
27 The score then goes on to the last musical number in Act 3 , ‘ A thousand thousand ways ’ , which is a song repeated by the chorus .
28 Unenamoured of either , he rejected both in favour of the career of a scribe here his own account goes on to other things becoming a clerk to the imperial divan in 922/1516 , and rising thence through the office of private secretary to two Grand Vezirs and that of to become nisanci in 941/1534 .
29 It examines the conditions under which a voting equilibrium exists ; and then goes on to representative democracy .
30 She goes on to Glasgow , London and Peterborough .
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