Example sentences of "go [adv prt] with [pos pn] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ She went back to work very quickly after her operation and if she goes on with her busy life as she fully intends to do , she needs a day or two off occasionally .
2 ‘ It 's not my intention to stay cooped up in here , waiting for them to go on with their little games . ’
3 Are you going to go on with your international exhibitions ?
4 We agreed that we should be considered rather callous to go on with our usual life when we were reading of 3,000 to 4,000 casualties a day …
5 ‘ I am going to have ruptured eardrums to go along with my mangled shoulder . ’
6 for the empty , unoccupied homes that makes it very difficult for me to go along with my hon. Friend the Member for Torbay ( Mr. Allason ) , who wanted the 50 per cent .
7 She eyed Mr Brown meaningfully over her hot cauldron of cabbage before going on with her set piece .
8 For a second or two he said nothing further , then , apparently going along with her unspoken wish to change the subject , he asked , tongue in cheek , ‘ And what did you think of our transport ? ’
9 Posh Porky seemed to be torn between going along with her old man to the synagogue and staying put at the shop , where she 'd sit by the window and start scoffing cream buns the moment he was out of sight .
10 Neither of you has admitted it , but Peter must have promised you something for going along with his mad scheme in the first place .
11 and they 're all going down with their little cards in their hands as they
12 He was intending to go up West himself that evening , but hardly expected to meet McAllister when he did so , seeing that , for once , he was going out with his disreputable brother Stair , and God knew where they would end up — nowhere respectable , that was for sure .
13 He had plenty of time to prepare this great phrase , for the outrage was said to have happened in 1731 and he was not asked about it until 1738 , but the delay led to no awkward questions ; by the late 1730s Parliament was growing increasingly annoyed with Spanish interference with British trade , and it was not willing to let Walpole go on with his peaceful policy .
14 Olive went on with her public service , working for the Red Cross , going regularly to Morris Grange , and becoming the longest-serving Alderman in England .
15 Just as his theoretical awareness of the importance of sense-experience as a basis for science went along with an increasing interest in practical , experimental investigation of the world , so his theoretical advocacy of Epicurean atomism went along with his actual use of it in his own work ; for example , in an account he gave of various optical phenomena produced by the sun .
16 At this very moment it was difficult to hold on to her reservations about him ; difficult and almost impossible not to fit in and go along with his present mood and be more than happy to do so .
17 I agreed with much of what the right hon. Member for Morley and Leeds , South ( Mr. Rees ) said at the beginning of his speech , but I did not go along with his closing remarks .
18 Sien was in an exhausted doze when he went in with her small daughter and her mother .
19 Doggedly , however , he went through with his rehearsed speech : ‘ Ah , well met , Clare !
20 The sole exception was Mother-she liked riding in a boat and went out with her close friend Mrs Fawcett , who took her boys along , too .
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