Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] on [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Because I did n't want the kids saying , ah , you have n't got to And I did n't want to go in on Saturday morning either did I ? |
2 | to remove existing 80-metre fence at west end and replace with new fence to allow full 2-metre width ( old fence to be removed at start of works ; new fence to go in on completion , to allow dumpers to manoevre while work is in progress . |
3 | The silver bugle light infantry badge is returning to Hartlepool after 50 years with the setting up of a new army cadet force detachment which is looking for boys and girls aged between 13 and 18 to go along on Monday at 7pm to St James Church Hall , Rossmere Way . |
4 | be fit to go it might be nice to go down on Saturday morning come back , Sunday Monday . |
5 | At the time of rehearsals for Freddie Mercury 's tribute concert at Wembley , former Queen bass player John Deacon strangely opted to go off on holiday , leaving Neil to dep with the band . |
6 | And then , out of the blue , as she was getting ready for bed on the evening before Kirsty was due to go off on holiday , Mrs Aitken tapped on Shiona 's bedroom door . |
7 | ‘ Are n't you and Charles due to go off on holiday soon ? ’ she queried , when tea and biscuits were duly dispensed to Lucy and she could sit down on a wicker-backed chair and sip her own . |
8 | It was not clear whether the two latest bombs had been set to go off on Friday , like one discovered and defused on Sunday , or whether they were freshly planted . |
9 | Progress to go up on top of AllBase/SQL database |
10 | SUNSOFT 's SOLARIS UNIX TO GO UP ON POWERPC RISC AS WELL AS iAPX-86 |
11 | Watch out , too , for sales staff or reps who encourage you to ‘ buy now ’ , implying that prices are about to go up on April 5 . |
12 | Selkirk threw him a cloak , telling the clerk to make himself as comfortable as possible and Corbett slept fitfully , waking once or twice to go up on deck to vomit his dinner into the sea amidst the jeering catcalls of the night watch . |
13 | She looked wistfully up the companionway to the square of blue sky , but fought the urge to go up on deck , scared he might ask her to do something that would reveal her ignorance . |
14 | ‘ He asked some girls to go up on stage and give him a kiss , and just for a joke I did . |
15 | Verdix Corp 's Verdix Ada Development System is to go up on Hewlett-Packard Co 's HP Apollo 9000 Series 700 workstations under an agreement between the two , and Verdix said an Ada code generator for the Oracle CASE Architecture is now available following a 1992 joint product development agreement it has with its unit Meridian Software Systems and Oracle Corp 's Oracle Federal Systems subsidiary . |
16 | MATISSE TO GO UP ON KENDALL 's OSF/1 |
17 | Another thing er While on union business er I used to go up on negotiations , you see ? |
18 | allowed my children to go out on trick or treat . |
19 | I used to go out on bike rides up to the lake but I do n't any more . |
20 | Most trips involve a certain amount of walking and most people can walk , with 97 per cent of the population able to go out on foot . |
21 | She was a woman of fine physical strength , ready to go out on foot or in a canoe when called for . |
22 | You then have your final or " Answerprint " ready to be transferred to video tape and sent to the stations to go out on air . |
23 | He had had to go out on exercise one night , and was on duty another , poor thing . |
24 | Portadown have lost Adele Sloan , who is pregnant , but Susie Kinley is back and Violet McBride will hope to go out on top in her last season . |
25 | Students in the USA had to go out on placement to firms for training , and thus had a good grounding in practical embalming . |
26 | Cost me a fiver for her hair to be done on Monday and another fiver to go out on Berlin Square on Tuesday . |
27 | ‘ If you 're going to tell me you 've got to go out on business , ’ she snaps , ‘ I 'm going to give your secretary the once over . ’ |
28 | ‘ I used to go out on Sundays in London , sometimes to a brasserie in Covent Garden or to an ‘ olde Englishe ’ pub , and I 'd forgotten just how pleasant a long lunch can be . ’ |
29 | We seemed to only just muster up enough energy to go out on stage and play that day , and after the show was done we were exhausted . |
30 | Terry had to go back on Sunday night and before he left for the station hugged his mother and looked fearfully into her drawn face . |