Example sentences of "[noun sg] go [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 From this , a lane goes forward to the last habitation , Dorusduain , with a parking space midway .
2 Coleraine started brightly with Cook and Brian Donaghy both going close in the opening three minutes , but the Crues settled quickly and were presented with a golden opportunity to go ahead in the 12th minute .
3 The win earns them the opportunity to go forward to the national championships at Hemel Hempstead in the south of England .
4 Unlike other countries , Britain does not allow the money to go straight to the local authorities to which it has been allocated .
5 The first stage in the transfer is a preselection process , involving informal discussions with tenants where they may make their own alternative suggestions , which eventually produces a single applicant to go forward to the final stages .
6 Although officials remain resolutely silent , there is a widespread belief that the British Government will authorise the colony 's administration to go ahead with the first batch of mandatory repatriations this week .
7 RELATIONS off the park between Rangers and their European Championship League rivals , Marseille , have deteriorated amid reports from Ibrox that the French side reneged on an agreement over tickets for the tie on 7 April that will decide which club goes forward to the European Cup final .
8 To finance the Club went ahead with the proposed issue of 15 Second Debenture Bonds ( at 5% ) , each of £100 .
9 But the ramifications of the study go well beyond the private law of finance and property on divorce .
10 Because on the inside — yes , I have my airwells , I have work going forward behind the net curtains .
11 My gaze went frequently to the other bearer of that awful secret .
12 Gore 's proposal went far beyond the informal investigation begun in May at the request of House Speaker Tom Foley .
13 I can feel behind my head the haze of reddish hair going away in the opposite direction .
14 This shift went well beyond the general decline of the traditional working class in the electorate ( discussed below ) and reflected the increasing selection of ‘ more educated candidates ’ with ‘ administrative aptitudes ’ under the conditions of electoral competition , and within the dominant technocratic conception of politics , which had held sway since the rise of ‘ Butskellism ’ in the mid '50s .
15 Energy fed into the turbulence goes primarily into the larger eddies .
16 The comprehension scales begin with items concerned with the extent to which a child associates a word or phrase with affective or situational meaning , and proceed to a point where ‘ ideational content goes well beyond the concrete evidence ’ — for example , ‘ The little boy has spilt his dinner ; what must he do ? ’
17 The winner of that round goes forward to the national final and stands to win £3,000 and the title UK Livewire of 1992 .
18 SMP is payable for up to 18 weeks unless the woman goes abroad outside the European community , is taken into legal custody , or returns to work .
19 Colombia , it is true , still seems to regard herself as an Atlantic nation — her trade goes principally through the Caribbean port of Cartagena rather than through the dire and crime-ridden wharves of the Pacific port of Buenaventura ; but Ecuador ( which has island possessions in the Ocean ) and Peru seem to be becoming further and further entwined in Pacific matters ; and Chile — ah , Chile !
20 Bowling resembles a number of older artists in the exhibition in that he came to England ( from Guyana , in his case ) to be an artist , had some success , then moved to and fro between London and New York when his public career went downhill in the Sixties .
21 Yet the Commons debate went far beyond the usual slanging match — and although Minister Robert Key tried hard to describe Government policy in the best possible light , serious concern and strong criticism was expressed that alone in the National Heritage budget , the English Tourist Board 's ( ETB ) funding is to be fiercely reduced .
22 But the new policy went ahead from the following autumn , 1956 , with the former resident tutors for Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire being redeployed as staff tutors and with Vivian Ramsbottom as Administrative Officer of the Joint Committee given a roving commission to encourage WEA branches in those counties now deprived of resident tutors .
23 Can my right hon. and learned Friend confirm that it took the emergency services an hour to reach the injured , and that another hour went past before the 125 was able to move off ?
24 But as the cockboat went aground on the sandy beach and the six men heaved it above the high-water mark , Harry saw that Sam was not with them , and by the expressions on their faces , he knew that something was wrong .
25 The effect of reading a Bill a second time is to curb further debate on the general principle for the time being and cause the Bill to go straight to the next stage , which is the committee stage .
26 While we remember those involved in medical missionary work overseas , let us also remember those who are currently in training to go overseas for the first time .
27 The pathologist and the Detective Sergeant had not been over-eager to react to his suggestion to go straight to the highest authority .
28 I would be grateful if you could confirm as soon as possible that you wish the application to go forward in the current year as noted here .
29 This suggestion went straight to the foolish Cassowary 's head , as the cunning Bower-bird began to chant gibberish .
30 However , the difficulties of containing risk go far beyond the immediate physical environment ; they relate also to old people 's capacity for self-care , keeping themselves clean , feeding themselves and so on .
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