Example sentences of "[adv] go [to-vb] on " in BNC.

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1 We will want to be able to build high capacity systems so going to take on the class of applications that have traditionally been associated with a mainframe .
2 I 'm not going to go on to the things of the brain because we are going to do them further down the list .
3 ‘ Ian , ’ she added suddenly , ‘ I 'm not going to go on being a poor typist to people I dislike and am frightened of .
4 Er because I do n't have a group of accountants in front of me I 'm not going to go on about debits and credits and so on and so forth .
5 Well , then that was at a higher level than at present , but we 're not going to take on at ten per cent interest .
6 I mean this , this product , if people have got the health to buy it , because we 're obviously not going to take on people that are in poor health , they can afford it , because obviously as they get older , the risk is greater and it becomes more expensive , it sells itself , it really does , it 's a brilliant product .
7 This is n't a political or geographical question , and I 'm not going to ramble on about environmental issues .
8 I would have thought the threat that you 're not going to get on because you 've had a crap appraisal would be fairly significant and I think that most branch managers
9 ‘ I am not bitter … we are just going to get on with our lives . ’
10 We are just going to get on with our lives . ’
11 If it 's s something like that and they tell me the amount of furniture and if two thirds of the van will be filled with big stuff , and then they tell me there 'll be half a dozen boxes , I assume there 'll be at least four times that number of boxes , and if it 's still going to go on , we 'll do it .
12 ‘ But you 're still going to carry on . ’
13 I 'd watched Motown and the blues catch on in the Sixties and the roots of all that stuff was laid in the Forties , so the funk was always going to catch on and stay .
14 After marriage , only the exceptional woman is now going to go on working outside her home . ’
15 ‘ He obviously was n't going to carry on with the Seven ; he 'd had his fun with it . ’
16 She was n't going to take on more trouble … there was enough of her own .
17 I was n't going to struggle on if I was going to die in six months !
18 If all the subsequent television and newspaper interviews are to be believed , the boy Lawson told Mrs Thatcher that he jolly well was n't going to stay on as Chancellor unless she fired that rotter Walters as her ‘ adviser ’ .
19 We decided we were n't going to get on without flirting with a lot of trouble , so we opted for the trusty 1-iron again .
20 But j just before you go , Tom , the issue on whether or not Peter or or it lets the thinner section deep groove ball bearings , is n't going to rest on .
21 ‘ You and Biff are never going to get on .
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