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

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1 Tractor development is n't just going on in the west either .
2 I heard it certainly I heard it just going on in the car .
3 Do you mind if I just go on in the way I 'm used to ? ’
4 For a repetitive task there may be comparatively little going on in the mind which emerges at the level of consciousness .
5 ‘ Cept there 's more goin' on in the evenin 's with First Aid and the like . ’
6 However , some natural change has gone on and is still going on in the country , and physical changes need to be anticipated in any local study .
7 The Persians had been driven from Greece not many years before the temple was begun , and the fight to free Greeks from them was still going on in the east .
8 Montrose House would of course not be the only cost-effective alternative but it does give some idea of the scandalous waste of resources which is still going on in the semi-State sector .
9 ‘ Ruddock 's trouble was that he was always going on in the build-up to the fight about how he reckoned he used to knock me out in sparring when we were kids .
10 It 's wonderful , is n't it , when trades have trade papers that can help them understand what is really going on in the world .
11 The MPs hope that talks now going on in the City between consultants and finance houses might help to raise cash — but at least one MP , Labour 's energy guru , Arthur Palmer , is not optimistic .
12 They wo n't send over the 2,000 word revelation on what really went on in the referee 's room at Lord 's , when the Texaco Trophy ball was changed , until BT fix the fault .
13 Harry , for his part , exchanged a knowing smile with Papaioannou , then went on in the direction of the village .
14 Mr. Speaker : It is well known that when the Benches are empty there is much else going on in the House .
15 … while it is a fact that presently desks are usually moveable , thereby permitting various kinds of grouping arrangements , this flexibility is not often required by what actually goes on in the classroom .
16 ‘ We ca n't really know what actually goes on in the world , like whether there really is honey : all we really know , and therefore all we can really tell other people , is what we believe goes on in the world . ’
17 The mismatch between a head 's espoused values and what was actually going on in the classroom could be startling — and indeed is a recurrent theme in several of our interim reports , notably 10 and 11 .
18 Many of the chemical reactions in the cell actually go on in the fabric of membranes ; a membrane acts as a combined conveyor-belt and test-tube rack .
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