Example sentences of "[adj] go to the " in BNC.

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1 The commission 's report , due to go to the president by early February , will eventually be published .
2 A recommendation to demolish the block of 1930s-vintage flats where the family lived is due to go to the council 's housing committee on 5 April .
3 Encourage those who are mobile to go to the toilet on their own .
4 I want a sample of that to go to the Met Lab urgently .
5 According to him , it was possible to go to the fair and be back in Roscommon before dark .
6 Normally amongst these is included any matter where the complainant has or had a right of appeal or right to go to the courts but has not used it .
7 The ‘ controversies of the day ’ certainly included the dispute over clause 43 of the Administration of Justice Bill in 1985 , by which the Government proposed to end the citizen 's right to go to the Court of Appeal when a lower court refused to give leave to apply for judicial review of the decision of a Minister or other public authority .
8 You either turn left to go to one side of Petswood or right to go to the other side of Petswood .
9 That goes to the centre of our faith .
10 They pay under contract $5 million indexed , so it is around $6 million now in practice , and that goes to the trust .
11 The , er , credit to that goes to the chairman and chief executive and the executive directors and they are responsible for the business and it is right , in my view , that they should be rewarded for it and encouraged to take risks to work very hard on our behalf to ensure that that growth continues er , er , that benefits the , er , company , it benefits the country it benefits the er ergo , people who are working for it , it is not inflationary because we are looking at productivity and the productivity in the company has increased significantly .
12 that goes to the summer does n't it ?
13 That goes to the bottom of
14 If you go and buy a a T V for a hundred and fifty pounds they 'd say thank you , a hundred and fifty pounds , plus VAT at a hundred per cent is another hundred and fifty to go to the government
15 that 's right , and he gets some unemployment money and I take ten pounds a week off him , for his food , I mean , it 's not enough but it 'll do , you know and then in dribs and drabs begrudgingly from that forty over the week once he starts to run out of money cos he 's paid once a fortnight I begin to give him his karate money and here 's two pounds fifty to go to the pub with Neil , you know , little bits
16 Any man is free to go to the wire .
17 It seemed sensible to go to the flat and telephone from there .
18 Do n't be afraid to go to the police .
19 Now whether you actually wish this to go to the court Council I do n't know .
20 This goes to the Inland Revenue Accounts Office along with the NI contributions and tax deducted in the previous month .
21 This goes to the heart of the issue of implementing HRM in educational institutions .
22 Pedulla 's stated aim is to produce an instrument which will sound ‘ alive ’ even at flat tone settings , and credit for this goes to the Bartolini powerhouses and Pedulla 's tone-shaping circuitry .
23 This goes to the six charities chosen by the Princess Royal , the Duke and Duchess of Kent , Prince Edward , and Princess Alexandra the Hon.
24 There is more chance of persuading the court to substitute its own finding of inferential fact from the direct facts , because this goes to the conclusions drawn by the trial judge from direct facts .
25 I resume my explanation of the Bill , and this goes to the very heart of the issues raised by the two hon. Gentlemen .
26 If s if he does n't why not and would , would you please tell us what possessed him to come out with such a , a remarkable statement and I think this goes to the what we 're talking about this morning .
27 This goes to the heart of how some judges would like to define
28 But it it 's inconvenient to go to the library , write down lots of addresses and then come away again .
29 ‘ I was prepared to go to the United States for the most up-to-date expertise , ’ says Clemency .
30 His language was often alarming , not least to America 's allies : he spoke of meeting Soviet aggressive with " massive retaliation " ( that is , nuclear weapons ) , and the need , in diplomacy , to have the nerve for " brinkmanship " ( being prepared to go to the brink of nuclear war ) .
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