Example sentences of "could go [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 We could go up on the railway sidings . ’
2 It snowed for three days without stopping , great cotton wool flakes , falling from a dark sky and swirling so thickly and blindingly that Mr Evans actually said the children need not use the privy in the yard in the daytime but could go up to the bathroom whenever they needed to .
3 but it meant people could go up to the box office and take a tape recorder and sit and listen to them
4 But the settlement is believed to have given Kuwait assurances that its production could go up in the summer if the market is strong enough .
5 We could go over to the Amsterdam and have a drink . ’
6 Could go on to the rugby and go with them could n't he ?
7 She could go back to the Rosenblooms , to the big house outside Glasgow where she had lived as one of the family for twelve years .
8 Do you think we could go back to the villa ? ’
9 ‘ I could go back to the house and look for it , ’ he offered in desperation .
10 Hungry and cold would have to wait until I could go back to the cafe , dirty was obviously going to be more of a problem .
11 Yes … well , perhaps we could go back to the study .
12 And when that 's right , but when , when we went on our clothes buying jaunt , we could go back to the car
13 We could go back to the car that 's it
14 You could , you could go back on the Permitabs if you want .
15 Wood engravings can accompany type , and so once again pictures could go back on the page ; they were also very durable , so that runs of hundreds of thousands were possible .
16 She could go down into the town centre and look at the shops , have a cup of coffee somewhere , get back to her mother-in-law by four .
17 Then we could go down on the line and wave it , ’ said Peter .
18 You could go out to the walkways , you could talk to somebody twenty four hours a day .
19 Apparently Chéron hid Modi 's clothes to keep him in , for Brancusi claimed to have rescued the stranded painter by buying him a jersey and a pair of trousers so that he could go out into the street .
20 I really think , although I would not be prepared to put it to the test , that you could go out in the streets of London in your nightdress and nobody would notice .
21 some members of a band could go out in the evening and pop into a whole bunch of places to ask if they will give them a gig .
22 Your wife could go out like the snuff of a candle .
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