Example sentences of "and [verb] off for [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 This is the beginning of the classic route to follow on a walking tour of Zurich , starting from the main railway station through the sophisticated poise of the Bahnhofstrasse and branching off for the Lindenhof .
2 But he recovered his balance in a stride and made off for the water jump .
3 I went out into Main Street and started off for the pier .
4 ‘ He 'll be delighted to have a break and go off for a pint .
5 ‘ I hate my fat knees , ’ she said , and went off for a ten-mile hike .
6 Sometimes he left the food , leaned into the wind and took off for a while , to circle and check that no Men were about .
7 He had burned his bridges in Hollywood and took off for the seclusion of Taos to hide away , his life having come to another dead end , cursed by his own self-destructiveness and sheer bad luck .
8 Rex dumped the two-headed sailor-boy back on my knee and took off for the phone .
9 THREE or four times a month a Royal Bank lorry laden with 4 tonnes of waste paper pulls out of Drummond House and sets off for a paper mill in Fife .
10 The next day we hired a Panda auto and nipped off for a game of golf , it had been rather warm and on returning Sonya suggested I remove my cerise tweeds and let my cornet Kascade down .
11 Although it was raining and freezing cold outside , we all got ready and pulled ourselves into our wet suits and set off for the river .
12 Miaow , thought Jenny as young Curtis stood up awkwardly and set off for the bar , turning after a couple of steps to ask , ‘ What do you want ? ’
13 When he had gone , Arty , smiling to himself at what he considered a victory , got out of bed and set off for the bathroom to wash his hair .
14 We got some torches together and set off for the graveyard .
15 We put on our képis , straightened our ties , pulled our fingers into regulation gloves and set off for the guardhouse .
16 At matches he had to be watched like a hawk in case he wriggled out of his headcollar , and set off for the tea tent , where his doleful yellow face and black-ringed eyes could coax sandwiches and cake out of the most stony-hearted waitress .
17 He bounded over the thirteenth and fourteenth and set off for the Chair , that huge open ditch which forms the biggest obstacle on the course .
18 He got up and dressed as though in a trance , and set off for the Castle with the hangdog look of a condemned man .
19 She combed her hair , applied her make-up and set off for the Post Office .
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