Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] go [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The DHSS were playing me up over the removal grant , so one of my sons went up to the house to see if there were any letters — everything had been smashed , crocks were smashed and the beds were slashed .
2 Then one of my sons went down into the village to see if the army had left , He came back to tell us that they had destroyed everything , that they had taken all the maize , all the cows and had burnt every house in sight .
3 WHILE my heart goes out to the parents in the baby-swop drama , I have to agree with the midwife interviewed on TV who said that it was ‘ a disaster waiting to happen ’ .
4 My heart goes out to the people who are being raped , pillaged and murdered just because they are Bosnian Muslims .
5 My heart goes out to the people who are being raped , pillaged and murdered just because they are Bosnian Moslems . ’
6 My heart goes out to the father and to all the family .
7 ‘ I could ask him and Tim and you , and make my mum go out for the evening . ’
8 My sympathy goes out to the people of Gateshead who have suffered a similarly sickening attack and I believe the government must now ensure that there is a positive and rapid response to meet the concerns of local residents . ’
9 My mind goes back to the original fifteen-year Hospital Plan , published in January 1962 .
10 My mind went back to the scene in that bedroom and the sliding doors to the paved patio .
11 we had our red and white rosettes and when our , I was sitting watching the match and when they scored the goal my slippers went up in the air .
12 First Mrs Agnes McGuinness : ‘ My husband went out on the Saturday and I did n't see him again until the Sunday morning .
13 My friend went on down the winding road for about two miles , finishing at the quayside , where he rapped smartly on a door .
14 Back in Cardiff , my name went up on the Honours Board and my father , in the last year before his retirement , quietly enjoyed the thought that I was to spend at least part of my life in the county in which his father had been born .
15 Our fourth child had been born 10 years previously and I do n't expect anyone believed there would be any more , but my wife and I thought we were getting too old too quickly , so we would have another two ; and on November 5 that year my wife went down to the bonfire which was already alight and saw on top of it a dropside cot she had been keeping , and which had served the four children , a relatively new carricot , and other items of that sort .
16 So my father went over on the Monday evening and after such a a young man paid such interest in the garden and paying so much compliments , Well you ca n't go home without coming in for a cup of tea .
17 Next day my father went back to the war and my mother back to the boarding school where she was on teaching practice as a French assistante , and spoke to the future wives of doctors and civil servants : Je suis , tu es , il est , nous sommes .
18 My father went off to the park .
19 I invariably receive responses such as ‘ anger ’ , ‘ fear ’ , ‘ frustration ’ , ‘ inadequacy ’ , ‘ failure ’ , ‘ my ideals went out of the window ’ , ‘ I wanted to throttle him/her ’ .
20 She begs her sister to go up to the top of the tower of the castle and look out for them , and keeps calling out to her , ‘ Anne , sister Anne , dost thou see nothing coming ? ’
21 The main opposition party , the right-wing Community party ( Atassut ) , lost three seats , leaving it with eight , as some of its support went over to the Centre Party , which entered the legislature for the first time with two seats .
22 Sister Rosario looked at the pinched face of Maura Ryan and her heart went out to the child .
23 Louisa received it so , and her heart went out to the suffering woman .
24 Charity felt her heart go out to the other woman .
25 ‘ When her heart goes out of the game that 's it .
26 ‘ My father called me Breeze , ’ she added , as he seemed interested ; and as she said that her mind went back to the hot summer 's day when her father had given her the nickname which had been adopted by everyone .
27 Well it was n't er the wife it was a bit of a setback , we had a bungalow you see , a small bungalow which was in a very , very nice part of Plymouth , well on the outskirts of Plymouth actually , almost in the country and er , to come and find this , well to her it 'd be like a , a terraced house , her mind went back to the old days in Manchester where she came from with the old terraced houses and I think she visualized that then to go in a house that had a , a square room , do you follow ?
28 ‘ Do n't let Dad hear for God 's sake , ’ she moaned quietly , as all her inhibitions went out of the window .
29 Its origins go back to the rediscovery of perspective in the Renaissance , and then to the architect 's drawings of the eighteenth century .
30 The ponies walked slowly because their feet went down into the snow .
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