Example sentences of "go [adv] [prep] [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Broadcasters do try to offer advice , but it often goes right over the heads of enquirers .
2 Michael , who stands six feet four inches and weighs in at 15 7 stone , beat Scotland 's Colin Brown in the semi-finals of the Amateur Boxing Association Championship at Gateshead Leisure Centre and now goes on to the finals in the Albert Hall , London on May 6 .
3 Exploring Hidden Processes : what goes on in the heads of pupils doing simple addition calculations ?
4 It is an opportunity to meet actors and find out what goes on behind the scenes with backstage tours , costume and make-up workshops , play-readings , and activities for children .
5 Have you ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes in our country 's commercial , industrial and public service organisations ?
6 There are many who are surprised to discover that the words you see before you have been brought to you with little electronic influence beyond that which goes on within the brains of the writer and reader .
7 I 'm not going to go on to the things of the brain because we are going to do them further down the list .
8 We 're going to go on to the effects of chilling and what damage does that do ?
9 Even Captain Kirk has stopped pushing back the frontiers of the universe boldly to go on to the streets as a cop with the unlikely name of Hooker , a case of Starsky being put into a hutch .
10 He , who wishes to continue getting plenty , goes along with the plans for a better tomorrow .
11 The descent to the south passes the relics of an abandoned lead mine and arrives at Clouds Gill to join the old mine road which goes down past the limekilns to The Street and the waiting car .
12 He works in the hospitals , he goes down to the projects in the Bronx .
13 this one , look at the back , I think the reason it 's so big is to go in on the sockets at the back , put , you can put two tapes on it
14 He had braved the bitter weather to go down to the bookshops on the Charing Cross Road not just for the chance to get some books — he could have bought them any time — but principally to meet Joseph Hyde and hear the latest news from Dublin .
15 If we 're to go home through the fields by the shore — what did you call-them , Meg ? ’
16 He had screeched to a halt in the residents ' parking bay in an unimpressed Hereford Road , let himself in , banged on his own door and , keeping his distance , ordered Jacqui to go off to the pictures for the afternoon .
17 Most people do n't care if they live or die , but a few are willing to risk imprisonment by going on to the streets to hand out clean syringes .
18 Just as most large organizations and systems have found important uses for the computer in accounting and housekeeping operations , so also large libraries , whether public , academic or special , have tended to put their acquisitions and other operations on to computer , and considerable experiment has been going on with the applications of computerization to information retrieval .
19 Listen to people on the Continent going on about the inadequacies of their own health-care systems .
20 Meanwhile , I had intervened in a wrangle which had been going on in the pages of Time and Tide over some articles Eliot had written .
21 ‘ We 're appalled by what 's going on in the charts at the moment .
22 Few of us were aware of the feverish political and diplomatic manoeuvres going on behind the scenes in Britain and Australia .
23 Most mathematicians understand what is going on inside the heads of most of their colleagues .
24 There are many reasons , apart from the trading of favours , for a legislator or bureau-crat going along with the wishes of the man in the White House .
25 A world leader with the security industry is actually going down to the levels of the one man and a dog outfit .
26 Venture capitalists like to keep close tabs on their investments , going down to the offices of the fledging chief executive officers once a week , putting their feet up on the desk and playing father confessor .
27 He got out of the planes coming , we , we was coming over from de Laborgie and you give him the needle and I had to lead him off the lead him off the plane , and going down over the chimneys in Chantilly to landu Laborgie he goes , woo ooh ooh , getting ready you know .
28 Erm how we would go about going outside into the workplaces in the various parts of the county convincing the members er to vote yes .
29 I do not know to which local authority the hon. Gentleman is referring , but may I try to explain the context of the debate to him , because it seems to be going straight over the heads of Conservative Members , as was evident in that intervention which I shall now try to answer .
30 And he carefully attempts to draw up a balance-sheet of union power , politics and prospects , going far beyond the clichés in which Grant deals .
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