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

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1 Erm we 're not always privy to what goes on with the front bench , but yes we have established regular dialogue with Jack Straw and the environment team , in order that we make sure we are saying the same thing .
2 To go on with the utter silence or to break the silence , pretending nothing had happened .
3 It is possible to go on with the same therapist to deal with the problems which caused you to need the regression experience in the first place .
4 With bottle feeding you have some choices after six months ; to go on with the original formula , use a follow-on formula or start boiled cow 's milk .
5 Oh yes , I was gon na say , I think convincing is is another word that goes along with the general ambience of what influencing is about .
6 It goes along with the common complaint that there are areas and methods of serious investigation which are just not touched by scholastic doctrines .
7 It is a mistake , I submit , to go along with the Dominican Matthew Fox in denying the concepts of the Fall and sin .
8 They refuse to go along with the current vogues to which the impressionable Continentals pander .
9 In such an optimistic climate it was easier for national governments and interest groups to go along with the economic ambitions of the EEC ; it was not seen as a great threat to their own concerns .
10 What the Independent very badly needs is very solid professional newspaper management er to go along with the good franchise which it has created erm and a proper owner who can actually er do what all of us in newspapers have to do from times to times which is back a promising newspaper .
11 It is easier to go along with the false cheerfulness .
12 It is just a matter of how you can build up the Kuwaiti nationality to go along with the growing community in the country and we were just a developing country .
13 While Judith , Rachel and Karen are sure their partners are happy to go along with the little alterations they try to make , Zelda says that interfering too much can prove to be very dangerous to a relationship .
14 However , she was prepared to go along with the advisory teacher 's point of view in the sessions and reassured herself concerning her own fears by using whole-class lessons to reinforce what she felt pupils should have discovered .
15 He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual .
16 car conked out so Vicki stayed with the car and her who we were going to take a walk in Ruddington , and I walked home with her to get Malcolm to go over with the other car .
17 I say this largely because of what is going on with the black blues artists , like Albert King , BB King , Albert Collins .
18 There was a time , I think , in the late sixties , when erm the education service did itself very little good by going along with the general mythology that you had only to put more money into the schools to service , to solve all social problems .
19 ‘ If you can do that , then you have in your mind what the strong target notes are and you can start going in with the other notes of the scale .
20 Earlier she had come down in this lift with Steve and now she was going up with the last person on earth she could have envisaged .
21 ‘ So you 're going out with the black kid , the messenger ? ’
22 He knew , because in a town the size of Plumford everybody knew these things , that Hubert Molland had been given a combined parish a few miles outside Plumford , and that the Mollands were now living in Champney Crucis ; he knew that Kate had left school and was now doing something at the technical college ; and , more importantly , he had heard from Joe that she was going out with the local MP 's youngest son , whose name was Julian and who drove a Triumph Spitfire .
23 Nonetheless , I started going out with the Thai development workers , to visit villages and meet the people I would be working with for the next two years .
24 ‘ I 've been going out with the same person for five years , ’ he reveals .
25 We had barely finished congratulating ourselves and going round with the good news when Mrs Maddock 's little boy from the post office ran to tell us it had been torn down .
26 Conscientious objection rose markedly ; 40 of the 400-strong military contingent ordered to go out with the anti-aircraft missiles refused to do so .
27 ‘ Not bad , ’ Gay conceded , and went on with the good work .
28 Then she went on with the lovely task of making herself the most important lady in Tollemarche .
29 Go on with the non-bloody bits . ’
30 If we go along with the present approach we shall have unilateral economic disarmament and many crucial matters will be decided elsewhere .
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