Example sentences of "[noun pl] go [adv] to the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Times to go down to the pits and the sun came out .
2 Tonight Middlesbrough stages the heats of the February Trainers ' Stakes , with the winners going through to the final on Saturday night .
3 ‘ We decided to build a balcony with steps going down to the garden , but our builder advised us to think about the year-round advantages of a conservatory , ’ Claudia explained .
4 There were some steps going down to the foreshore near a riverside pub .
5 He shuddered and looked away , his eyes going off to the horizon .
6 ‘ Do their heads go right to the top of their helmets ? ’
7 When the dun evening comes the kids go down to the irrigation channels for some bilharzia bathing .
8 Her eyes went straight to the wicker chair by the window where a baby was just waking from its morning sleep .
9 But his eyes went back to the Workshops and he frowned and sought for the right thing to say .
10 Perhaps the biggest problem with the Severin thesis is that recent work in Mesoamerican archaeology , and the deciphering of Mayan hieroglyphic codes , make it clear that the classic Mayan civilisation ( AD300 to AD900 ) had precursors going back to the Olmecs in 1000BC and earlier .
11 When engineers go back to the drawing board and create a new design , they do not necessarily throw away the ideas from the old design .
12 The four sets of parents went in to the Panel separately , although they were to be treated as one case .
13 On Thursday night — late night shopping — Nails went down to the supermarket in his anorak with the big pockets and lifted six electric plugs , four pairs of scissors and a pair of pillowcases which he sold to a friend of his father 's for three pounds .
14 ‘ Do your feet go right to the end of those ? ’
15 Its origins go back to the rediscovery of perspective in the Renaissance , and then to the architect 's drawings of the eighteenth century .
16 The guardian asked three climbers going down to the village to inform the police , as he was unable to contact them himself since the refuge radio was broken .
17 As a matter of principle , the bank in such circumstances should not be entitled to rely on the transaction and this is the view which has been taken by a series of authorities going back to the beginning of this century .
18 There were hundreds of ropes going down to the stage below — it was a long , long way down .
19 It was noon before they had completed the morning 's tasks , and as they came out from the buildings to go across to the house , the snow had ceased to fall .
20 Sunday morning say the start of the ladies ' competition with St Albans A and Mutineers going through to the semis to play St Albans B and Woodmill respectively , the latter two having been given byes to this stage .
21 It 's the Saturdays going out to the hospital , the smell of floor-wax and urine in the corridors , the helplessness , the moments of despair …
22 Despite the fact that spiders are all over the place in Dostoevsky , not just in Svidrigailov 's dirty bathhouse vision of Eternity , and that urban potted plants go back to the beginning in Poor People , we are here firmly inside Crime and Punishment in its abandoned first-person narrative form ( ‘ I am on trial and will tell all ’ ) : Petersburg evenings and their hanging summer light , noises from below , happy workmen , blessed ‘ living life ’ elsewhere , a lonely man in pain passing through gates , over thresholds , slipping up and down staircases , the buzzing By of Raskolnikov 's dream and his awakening , intense time-consciousness alternating with time-oblivion .
23 With Sophie back behind much stronger bars , the intrepid PCs went back to the school yesterday to claim their reward chocolate coins .
24 The CAB has become quite used to responding to emergencies , so when a bureau is alerted to an impending crisis and the clients are unlikely to be able to visit the bureau , the workers go out to the clients .
25 She called them girls but many were women whose working days went back to the Utility dresses and khaki battle-dress .
26 Of every hundred pounds that 's invested , round about forty pounds goes straight to the government in betting duty , round about thirty pounds goes to the football pools in expenses , commissions and profits , leaving round about thirty pounds to be returned in prizes , and so you can see that your rate of return on football pools is extremely small , but on the other hand a very large number of people do enter the football pools , and when they win they can win considerable sums of money and it can make absolute rational economic sense to go in for football pools because you are giving yourself a chance , no matter how small , of winning a sum of money that you would n't expect to come across in any other way of your life .
27 The Big Bang has certainly encouraged the trend towards offering Golden Handcuffs — to maintain the Golden Hellos — and the insertion of exclusion clauses in contracts to prevent executives going over to the competition .
28 And the bridge , with the strings going through to the back of the body ?
29 Indeed late news stories can be added just moments before the final pages go off to the printers .
30 After the first round 8 teams went through to the final comprising 5 AIB Bank teams from Bank Place Ennis , Nenagh , Bindon St. , Ennis , 63 O'Connell St. , Limerick and Charlesville , B/I 94 O'Connell St. , Limerick and Ulster Bank O'Connell St. Limerick .
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