Example sentences of "[noun] go [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | A death is always exciting , always makes you realise how alive you are — how vulnerable but so-far-lucky , but the death of somebody close gives you a good excuse to go a bit crazy for a while and do things that would otherwise be inexcusable . |
2 | If the fight goes the distance , there might hardly be the thickness of a stamp between them unless Chris ups his recent workrate . |
3 | Down goes the axe . |
4 | We refuse to accept the human and inevitable tragedy of aging , even in the case of contemporary art , which we condemn to an unwanted permanence , despite its attempt to go the way of all flesh . |
5 | Along with this imaginative , inspirational side of the mind goes the capacity — better developed in some than in others — for intuition . |
6 | But er I think erm the pound goes a lot further there , you 'll probably fe but I 'd probably feel like a millionaire in Jamaica |
7 | ‘ But , look , Gurder … maybe Angalo goes a bit too far , but he could be right . |
8 | On the BBC 's Standing Room Only programme at 6.50 tonight , Newbon discusses the chances of an English club going the way of French team Paris St Germain , who were bought by Chanel Plus last year . |
9 | But the pink went a bit |
10 | Ping went the lift bell at ground-floor level . |
11 | Down went the Bluecher . |
12 | But only a hiatus at National Carriers caused by the closure of British Rail 's door-to-door parcels service in 1980 stopped NFC going the way of other privatisations — into the pockets of disinterested individuals and institutions . |
13 | But changes in attitude go a lot deeper than watching the pennies . |
14 | With the first of these emancipations went the opportunity to create his material and technological culture ; with the second , comparable opportunities for his mental and social culture . |
15 | It was drawn from a cask , a cork inserted in the top of the bottle which was placed in the corking machine , one pull on the lever and home went the cork . |
16 | Dom-peromp — stamp — derompompompedom , derom — stamp — perom — stamp went the music as we clattered round the loose floorboards . |
17 | But Ellice went a stage further ; she began to construct alliances with regulationists-especially with the local police chief , Inspector Aniss , bête noir of the repealers — who warmed to her clear message of rescue backed by greater control of the streets . |
18 | What , and I let the bread go a bit toasted first then |
19 | It is not faith going a second mile ; it is faith making its first full step and there is no going back . |
20 | . That 's just the things we do , with the coronary arteries , we do coronary artery by- passes , I can , I can sew like any woman , I can darn your socks , we stick the veins on and we re-establish the the heart going a bit faster . |
21 | Bang goes the diet |
22 | Alongside the priority given to food and fuel goes a restriction of expenditure on items which are — or can be treated as — individual and less essential , like clothes , shoes , private transport and leisure . |
23 | Pop goes the weasel . |
24 | Like pop goes the weasel . |
25 | With this mysterious absence of ‘ stain' goes a forgetting of grief ; though the Fellowship has just lost Gandalf in Moria , the fact is not mentioned for some twenty pages ( I , 350–70 ) , and indeed we are told that ‘ In winter here no heart could mourn for summer or for spring ’ . |
26 | Christian attorney Constance Cumbey goes a step further in The Hidden Dangers of the Rainbow when she writes of the ‘ coming age of barbarism ’ , and describes the New Agers as a ‘ viable movement that truly meets the scriptural requirements for the Antichrist and the political movement that will bring him on the world scene ’ . |
27 | So are there two boats going every day then ? |
28 | ‘ You have to remember that with Tweed gone the post of Deputy Director becomes vacant . ’ |
29 | Clunk went the head of Cornelius Murphy . |
30 | Clunk went the head of Cornelius Murphy . |