Example sentences of "going [adv prt] to the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The local heats take place at Acklam Sports Centre on Wednesday and Thursday , July 29 and 30 with the winners going on to the regional final on August 5 .
2 Before going on to the general question of crack propagation and control , it is worth considering some of the special effects of a dynamically applied load such as a blow .
3 Gill will be going on to the Namarroi area to take part in an evaluation with the CCM .
4 The history specialists in the secondary school for the area may also be able to offer advice , especially as pupils from the catchment area will ultimately be going on to the secondary school .
5 Whether time permits or not , a detour should be made along the A.881 from Broadford to its terminus at Elgol , there going down to the colourful beach of pebbles and wild flowers and low cliffs : a beautiful foreground to a classic view , the finest in Britain , of the Black Cuillin across the wide waters of Loch Scavaig , a picture that would defeat a Constable or a Turner .
6 he just do n't like going down to the deep end
7 I put going down to the English Centre and using the computer
8 The stones are sometimes said to turn round or dance before going down to the local stream or lake to drink .
9 Most people met through casual pick-ups , going through to the Black Prince , which was the equivalent of the Vauxhall today .
10 ‘ Whoever 's that ? ’ said his Mum going through to the front door .
11 A trench one to 1½m in depth is dug , and the base is lined with loose stones to prevent the roots going through to the hard soil beneath .
12 Switchboard use it a lot again , to try and get to the bottom of , you know , calls that are going through to the wrong place and things like that .
13 ‘ I 'm trying to get a little privacy , ’ she murmured , going over to the far side of the boat where she would be hidden from view .
14 Pravda had commented late in 1931 : In England , as elsewhere , the task of the " Lefts " consists in hindering the workers who are becoming revolutionised from abandoning the Labour Party and going over to the revolutionary fight , to Communism .
15 Going over to the little cupboard above an old porcelain sink , she promptly emptied it of glasses , filled each one with water and pulled a tray out from underneath the sink .
16 Do you remember many people going off to the Red Brigade ?
17 There are also problems at Wild Cat Tor , where serious erosion has been caused by climbers going up to the Blue Grass and Singing Kettle buttresses .
18 The woman who sang wandered over , carrying her sheets of music , and stopped to say a few words to Dr Rafaelo before going up to the little stage and setting up her recording deck to accompany her nightly concert .
19 I 'm going up to the top floor .
20 Going out to the outlying part of town in which the creche had been situated you now travelled along a metalled road .
21 Of course , I avoided so much work , going out to the bloody square on Tower Hill to gawk at the gore-drenched platform where the Great Ones of the land had their heads cut off .
22 As the first group of pulses were directed to the satellite high above the Indian Ocean , mixed up with all the other transmissions going out to the Far East , they were snatched out of the ether by the NSA 's giant aerials at Morwenstow 60 miles up the coast to the east of Goonhilly , and compared with the watch lists of ‘ interesting ’ numbers on their computer memories .
23 I think that erm we have a great role to play in international agencies , in people going out to the developing world to teach through education , to perhaps change attitudes in rural development where , as we know , greater prosperity tends to influence people to have fewer children , and since many of the reasons for having large families is to ensure survival , so that the agricultural plot is taken over , the family continues to work , the active group can field the older group , there is less need for that now .
24 " Even going out to the open air services .
25 ‘ You will not lose by this , Yin Tsu , ’ he said softly , his heart going out to the old man .
26 Going back to the apparent contradiction between this chapter and chapter 1 , we must consider this question of diachronism more carefully .
27 Charles of Blois was the candidate favoured by Philip VI , and Edward accordingly supported Montfort , offering him not only military assistance but also the earldom of Richmond , with which the Breton ducal family had a connection going back to the Norman Conquest .
28 It was peaceful more than frenetic , a mirage of slow dawns and sunsets going back to the fluted point people : humbling .
29 Channel 4 's comedy department has at last found the right format for a cabaret star — by going back to the innocent childhood of TV comedy .
30 Birmingham had a tradition going back to the inter-war period for ‘ tough ’ and ‘ realistic ’ empirical research on the Soviet economy , which was unique among British universities .
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