Example sentences of "able go [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 The occupational therapist had asked Esther 's husband to prepare a downstairs bathroom and toilet for Esther , as she thought she would never be able to go up and down stairs on her own .
2 Today 's training exercise was only able to go ahead because of an emergency packing operation which has been set up at the base .
3 With the High Court 's decision , the golf course is now able to go ahead and the Park authority is liable for the costs of both the original appeal at Public Enquiry and of the hearing in the High Court .
4 We 're not going to be able to go on as we are .
5 Another reason to be grateful for all the publicity and discussion about child abuse is that former victims are seeking treatment at a far earlier age than was previously the case and therefore are able to go on and live a normal life once that treatment is complete .
6 They wo n't be able to go on if we do n't rest . "
7 Harbury tried to grab the apparent opportunity but Wickham neatly turned the conversation so that Shildon was able to go on where he had left off .
8 Alright , I mean there 's I think we 've got more responsibilities where the husband tends to be able to go away and do that a lot easier than what a woman would be able to do .
9 I have accepted part of it , and I 've amended it to ensure that we can overcome the criticisms er that would have been involved if we 'd left it er as it was , er and above all , and I think this is the most important thing , we 've made sure that it will work , er and that it will meet our objectives of getting competition into the franchises , if we 'd just ended up with one great monolithic British Rail , after all each franchise remember will be coming gradually , they wo n't be doing them all at once , there will be one next year , several the year after , and so on , if British Rail had been able to go around and pick them off , and say , Well we can run this now in the future much better than we 've done it in the past , so we 'll bid , and we 'll bid a low bid , that really would n't have been getting fair and proper competition into the system , so what i what I 've done is ensured , as I 've done all the way through in this bill in accepting amendments , that we make sure we achieve our objectives , and that above all it 's workable , the , as it was it would n't as it was the Paignton amendment would n't have been workable , because there would have been total chaos and confusion
10 ‘ If for any reason the runners were able to go faster than us in the marathon , I 'm sure they would organise it differently for them . ’
11 He had not been able to go out and be at ease with people .
12 Mercifully , by the third day Nigel got some time on his own and was able to go out and buy a meal .
13 They are able to go out and market the product they 've got , and farmers are traditionally bad at marketing . ’
14 It may , for example , be necessary to undertake more home visiting than is thought usual , at least until the time when the bereaved person feels more able to go out and face the world again .
15 Wiv all the money we 'll make from the match day market and the find the lady stall in the boardroom — oh sorry , no , you 've already got one — we 'll be able to go out and buy a few proper players .
16 ‘ All we ever wanted was for for Laura to get back to health and be able to go out and play with Louis , ’ said Fran who is expecting her third child .
17 With four minutes left I was worried — worried whether I would be able to go out and eat for the next week or so .
18 ‘ All I want is to be able to go out and play with my friends , ’ she says .
19 Artemis 's father was away for a week 's sport in Leicestershire , and apparently it was expected of Artemis that she should be ready and able to go out and ride her new horse side-saddle alongside her father on his return .
20 ‘ I 've got used to not being able to go out and enjoy the solitude of the garden .
21 Now we 're not going to be able to go out and check where , which way that every pound is spent .
22 It is through these means that the people , our people , all the people in this city many of them bound together and then able to go out and think about their civic lives if you like , their civic , the way th that this council works perhaps and take part much more in just go in and putting little crosses on pieces of paper maybe .
23 Now we hope we will be able to go out and actually plan which places we are going to inspect and how often we are going to do it .
24 We are all delighted that she will be able to go home but we will all miss her .
25 And for some veteran or novice rower , they 'll be able to go home and say they 've just rowed with an Olympic gold medallist .
26 Some of these patients will continue to be nursed in a surgical ward , some will be able to go home and others to a hospice for care .
27 Demands exceptional standards of herself , knowing that her staff will be able to go anywhere and say ‘ I have worked with Sally Clarke ’ .
28 We 'll be going to London for a few days next month to find suitable premises , so I 'll be able to go down and see Mum and Dad and the children .
29 So they 'll have the run of the place then and then they 'll be able to , be able to go in and out once they please I suppose .
30 Having thus grasped the important principle that kinship terms reflect social usage , Morgan was able to go further and indeed to anticipate later research in his perceptive assessment of the social advantages of the classificatory system .
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