Example sentences of "gone [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Nightmare wore off somewhat during the day , but still feel things have gone awry since the weekend .
2 Erm , parent involvement , there is no mention in this report about parent involvement , and I think this is absolutely essential that the , it 's often the families who are poor parenting , because they 've been poor parent people , and you have succession , and we 've gone somewhere along the line , we 've got to go down that road .
3 It 's gone right into the top-ten best-sellers .
4 What absolute rubbish — he 's gone right over the top with a load of old cobblers there and I do n't know why .
5 It was found that one shot had gone right through the moored barrel .
6 But something 's gone right with the lama ,
7 Yet nothing had gone right for the crusade .
8 I 've an awful feeling we should have gone right at the last junction .
9 She had gone right to the bank with them when she 'd discovered he 'd gone .
10 In fact , they 've gone right to the top .
11 When I went to find her , however , I discovered she had gone right to the top of the house to talk to Heathcliff through his locked bedroom door , and had then climbed out on to the roof and in through his window .
12 North-East refs have a very good reputation , and give a lot of help to people coming through maybe that 's why some have gone right to the top .
13 Gone right to the top , the lucky bastard . ’
14 Neumeier has gone right to the heart of Shakespeare 's great work , and he has brilliantly chosen both the dance styles and the music to suit the three dramatic groupings of the play .
15 IT 'S GONE right off the boil , armchair doctors of satire will inform you now .
16 ‘ It 's gone right round the whole of Devon , Somerset and Cornwall .
17 The Americans were friendly and polite , but there was no mistaking their view that Britain had gone downhill to the point that we had become an irrelevance .
18 Since then , for the thirteen years since Kapuscinski 's departure , things have gone badly for the Angolans , and they are still suffering terribly .
19 Already I could see myself standing there , tongue-tied and grinning sheepishly , the star of a bedroom farce which had gone badly off the rails .
20 They had gone all over the place ; peeking into the Oval Office ( but the little rope was across , Hakim said ) ; stopping on the stairs to look at a picture called The Canine Cabinet , in which North pointed out a drowsing member and said it was Casey ; and into the Roosevelt Room , where North showed the young Iranian the Nobel Prize won by Theodore Roosevelt for negotiating peace between the Russians and the Japanese .
21 He 's gone all over the eastern Mediterranean , and now has plans to go to the western end , to Spain , which was a thriving colony of the Roman empire with a lively intellectual life which had n't been touched by the Christian faith .
22 He had gone halfway across the first field when he heard a cry behind him .
23 To reach their goal d'Abreu 's men had gone halfway round the world from Europe to the Orient , and always in directions with an easterly component .
24 By November 1944 , only the Bristol 167 and the Type 2 aircraft , the twin-engine Airspeed 67 , had gone much past the preliminary design stage , and the Brabazon Committee warned that the five new types would face obsolescence if their development were not speeded up .
25 She told her parents how she and Susan had bumped into the two lads from Northallerton and that they 'd all gone together to the Lobster Pot for a drink .
26 As the worlds of savage and sexuality had gone together in the earlier poetry , now , together , they seem banished .
27 I wish Eileen had waited and they might have gone together like the lads , although God knows , Carrie , I dread the thought of any more going . ’
28 At Falmouth one sunny day with Valiant , I received a frantic call from our catering officer who had gone ashore with the motor boat on a falling tide .
29 She was still not completely used to the journey northwards to the small empty house , when for so long she had gone southwards to the big flat near Westminster Cathedral , where her mother had waited , eager to hear every detail of her day .
30 I was listening engrossed to the woman I was walking to work with , who the night before had found two night-screws stretched out on the desk in a passionate embrace when she 'd gone downstairs to the office to ask for a Tampax .
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