Example sentences of "[noun sg] [prep] [noun] go [adv prt] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | This may not seem too controversial , but when one of the team leaders is an ex-alcoholic it requires tremendous openness to God to go down a risky and unexpected route ! |
2 | ‘ That 's a bit of history gone down the tubes , eh ? |
3 | Oh they were just all that kind all those working kind of folks going up the glen . |
4 | He was going to put the medals back in his drawer and listen out of the window for Lee going up the field , listen for the sheep . |
5 | A large proportion of balls went down the leg side , which was not the ideal means of curtailing the driving of Boon , Briers and Whitaker . |
6 | ‘ Like a band of gipsies going down the highway , ’ sing these menopausal Monkees , ‘ we 're the best of friends . ’ |
7 | The two Constables … in a further neglect of duty went down a back entry , where they were caught smoking together , and later one of the Constables and the Acting Sergeant falsely concocted a story to disguise these infractions … |
8 | As soon as steam trains were invented , up and running , they became the tools of the industrialist and of the punter on holiday , noisy , smelly , usually late , and the last word in ways to go down the coast . |
9 | Mind you 're still got , still getting a lot of heat going up the old chimney are n't you ? |
10 | Oh yes , because er we had a lot of letter going back an forth to architects or to other slate merchants or to quarry owners . |
11 | DUTY AND DEFINITION Debates about the accountant 's duty of care go back a century . |
12 | ‘ Ringwood 's history with dogs goes back a bit further . |
13 | A load of schoolchildren going on a day out . |