Example sentences of "go [adv prt] to the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The winners of the best gross trophy then decide , either by mutual agreement or by a play-off , on the player who goes on to the national championships .
2 The world of motor racing loves to surround itself in secrecy … what goes in to the automatic gearboxes … suspensions and highly tuned engines is more to do with science than sport …
3 In the Junior Singles final John Nolan of Blackrock looked almost certain to go through to the British Isles Championship when he led Belmont 's Paul Daly 20-11 .
4 So that really means going on to the Labour resolutions and the Liberal resolutions
5 Going on to the inter-war years the authors note that there was no great reduction in the number of incidents reported in the press , despite the reputation of the large crowds of those years fur generally good behaviour .
6 Before going on to the detailed issues , let me begin by discussing some general aspects of what we mean by a crossroads and by the international position of an economy .
7 Every kung fu club conducts its training session in a programmed manner , beginning with warm-up exercises , going on to the basic techniques , and then practising forms .
8 Before going down to the northern ramparts where the brunt of the attack was expected to fall , he took a last look round the room and saw Hari 's phrenology book lying on the floor .
9 Beyond the car park , the road contours the hillside , two branches going down to the coastal dwellings of Inver Alligin , and then turns sharply uphill to force a narrow passage across a bare and rocky headland on the last stage of its journey .
10 are writing the remit and then the remits are n't going out to the other competitors .
11 Going back to the early thoughts of the RHA on the matter in the mid-1970s , it had been recognized that the reduction in the hospital populations meant that there would be competition for any savings between the hospitals themselves and district services .
12 Going , going back to the early days you mentioned that erm the dividend , the divi was quite important .
13 That is why the concept of the safety case — a case going back to the very essentials of design — is so important .
14 Going back to the old trams .
15 I understand that it is possible , even at this late stage , that the review itself could be overturned by the refusal of France to agree the new allocation of seats and we 've already had an exchange on that , Mr Deputy Speaker , which indicates that whatever we decide today might actually be overthrown and overturned completely by the inability of the French to ratify their part of the arrangement , er the minister referred to it as a massive inconvenience , I suggest that if we have to resort to going back to the old boundaries to fight these elections and indeed the problems that that will cause for the selection of candidates as well , that that will be one of the greatest understatements that even this house has heard .
16 … Trouble with going back to the old days , the [ agency ] was more or less a family concern .
17 But see we 're going back to the old seasons now .
18 He goes out to work , that means he 's going round to the various houses and
19 Hot cross buns , Simnel cake and Easter biscuits ( see recipes on page 60 ) contain currants and mixed spices that have been eaten at Lent since Elizabethan times , although their use goes back to the Middle Ages when only the rich could afford spice .
20 Probably , someone you would disapprove of I did n't know whether remember no probably not it goes back to the middle ages .
21 When the subordinate process terminates , control goes back to the calling processes .
22 The work of cataloguing goes back to the early years of Italian unification in the late nineteenth century when the first photographs were taken of archaeological sites and of celebrated pictures and monuments .
23 And that goes back to the early days of silage .
24 This now goes back to the ordinary grants money .
25 This ice cream boasts American parentage , though its ancestry goes back to the exotic sherbets which were made in the Arab kingdoms of Granada and Cordoba in Spain .
26 Jacobson 's rehabilitation of Cain is in a literary tradition that goes back to the Romantic poets , who identified with Cain as an outsider .
27 I mean effectively , I always wanted to go back to the middle ages er , with , with the history books of English society .
28 But Tory schools minister Michael Fallon , MP for Darlington hit back : ‘ No one wants to go back to the old days of councillors running hospitals , of Nupe deciding whether or not your operations should be carried out . ’
29 But to go back to the old ways ‘ would be a colossal mistake , ’ he declared .
30 Nevertheless you also feel pressure on you to go back to the old ways .
  Next page