Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb mod] go [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The SACHR said that affirmative action should go as far as positive discrimination , e.g. the tie break , but this is not in the legislation .
2 A ‘ Harvey Wallbanger ’ was the most dangerous kind of driver — a real nut that no trucker would go anywhere near if he could help it .
3 In the nature of things , much of this feedback will go no further than the local office , but senior bureaucrats are much involved in the preparation of new policies for politicians and it would be strange indeed if such feedback never featured in new recommendations .
4 I think that if the present association is continued , and if this meeting agrees that it should be continued , you will see some more breaking up , and I believe the process must go on inevitably until the old Conservative Party is smashed to atoms and lost in ruins .
5 In theory this process could go as far as equating marginal cost with demand so that the bureaucracy obtains all the consumer surplus .
6 Anyone looking for an exotic finish to a room need go no further than Ravissant .
7 Our clientele will go down quicker than free beer on a beano ! ’
8 And one of them best lads of the yard used to go up there and meet the year meet them .
9 A man will go so far and then he will snap .
10 True , Novell seems to be promising that life will go on much as usual .
11 Aunt Sarah was right in saying that it would take five days to reach Liverpool , since the barge could go no faster than the horse which pulled it .
12 Well they usually out out of the er hydrant on the quay cos the hydrant on the quay there used to be a water main a the water main used to go along there and we used to put so much water into the boat and now we come down and used to pump that out and then go back after some more .
13 San Diego Zoo expressed interest in buying two pairs of hoolock gibbons from him — but has since reassured IPPL that the sale will go ahead only if the animals are genuinely captive-bred .
14 The definition implies that the tendency must go much further than merely shocking or disgusting readers .
15 Dr Alastair McLeish , the branch secretary of the ULA , said the one-day strike at the school would go ahead tomorrow and be escalated to a three-day strike next week .
16 In particularly weak cases the conciliation officer will go so far as to advise the applicant to withdraw the claim .
17 The electric you say oh the electricity can go round there and if it gets light ,
18 It may be that the lovely weather will go on even after the hall is pulled down , in which case we can meet out of doors , but we ca n't expect to go on doing that when autumn and winter comes , can we ? ’
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