Example sentences of "he go [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The only way you can do that is if he goes to a special unit at Maidstone and works
2 Every so often , he goes to a local hospital where they give him an injection of something , which cheers him up noticeably .
3 He goes to the Chinese desk , and takes a sheet of paper out of the Mexican paper-rack .
4 In ‘ At Tikhon 's ’ he goes to the holy man with a document which he gives him to read , and which he does read , and which Stavrogin next proposes to publish .
5 A young wife may assume that her husband will come shopping with her and he may take it for granted that she will stay at home while he goes to the local football match , or plays golf with the boys .
6 But here 's Rozario Gemmell Black Pearce is up in support but he goes for the long ball in and Hill met it first .
7 He goes for the older woman ! ’
8 and he goes off the big city ma ma , like this and he 's got a fucking flying helmet and a flying bucket
9 He goes with a big girl called Cathy .
10 so er I 've got to keep him off school today and see how he goes over the next day or two .
11 When he goes on the one day in two years that something went wrong , that shows he 's doing a good job . ’
12 Brian Rouse a mechanic says he goes through a thorough check every day and washes the bikes and night and sometimes has to rebuild them .
13 Here , in a role that might have better suited Peter Sellers , or , more authentically , Alberto Sordi , he goes through a few variations on Ben Braddock and Jason Fister , the agent in his first Italian misadventure .
14 A Man Utd fan dies and goes to heaven but before he goes through the pearly gates he has to pass a test .
15 But now he goes into an all-out attack , arguing that whereas relational properties presuppose the existence of certain non-relational , or " qualitative " , properties , the latter properties do not necessarily demand the existence of any " pluralistically committed " relational properties at all .
16 He goes into the front bedroom and tells where everything 's going to go .
17 And he goes into the non-title contest revealing : ‘ I do n't bother watching tapes of my opponents any more .
18 The Wales Under- 19 cap seems certain to receive a minimum three-month ban when he goes before the Welsh Rugby Union next month .
19 he goes by the carved shafts at cross-roads , pours oil on them from his flask , falls on his knees , makes an obeisance , and only then moves on .
20 So look where 's he going to the next day ?
21 Had he gone to a National Health hospital
22 He went down the airless corridor to his Boss 's office , said hello to the secretary , and walked into the large oak-panelled room which was as big as the lobby of many a sizeable hotel .
23 He went to a Jesuit school , served as an altar boy ( as did his future enemies the Snowman and the Falcon , both now doing time for espionage against the United States ) , and read law at Fordham .
24 Perhaps when he 's with other people he pretends he went to a posher school — Eton or something .
25 He went to a Masonic dinner last night , and it gave him indigestion . ’
26 His hair curled around his face , and he went to a small basin and swilled water from the tap , rubbing his face and head briskly with a towel .
27 He went to a local pub in the mining village where he was staying to drown his sorrows and found himself sitting next to a stranger who remarked on his dejected demeanour .
28 You said he went to a local church . ’
29 The following evening he went to a different wine bar and bought drinks for two different young women .
30 I need not refer to his history in any more detail up to June 1990 , but in that month he went to a residential school where his mother continued to visit him and in October 1990 he absconded from that school .
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