Example sentences of "[conj] [noun prp] go [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Where Chartier went further was in asking whether nobility was something which came to a man by virtue of his birth ( and could therefore be inherited ) or whether it was accorded in recognition of merit ? |
2 | Somebody stepped down from the street and peered through the glass door but seeing Wycliffe went away again . |
3 | We both wobbled then , through hours of stones and velvet dusk to the hut , where Sal went straight to bed , leaving me with two soups , two teas and a bottle of wine to deal with . |
4 | It was with tears of joy in his eyes , that Felix went forward to meet the torchbearers , who by their chants were evidently proclaiming him the hero of the hour . |
5 | There was nobody in the passage , so Raoul went quickly up to the door of the dressing-room , opened it and went in . |
6 | The poets Czeslaw Milosz and Donald Davie have been bothered by the insufficiency and irresponsibility of the lyric genre , and it could be felt that Kundera goes further than they do in denouncing the lyric , and fares worse . |
7 | The chamber was empty so Corbett went straight to his room , threw himself down upon his cot and fell into a deep and dreamless sleep . |
8 | She remained in the room for a long while but although Carrie went there twice with tea for them , she found them talking in the Romany language and did not understand anything they said . |
9 | It was only because her mother approved so strongly of Pogo that she was allowed to go out with him to places like this , and then , as often as not , her mother insisted that Aubrey went too . |
10 | Now , when is it that Aubrey goes home ? ’ |
11 | So that when evening came they were both tired , not only from physical effort but from sheer exposure to the elements — Fen perhaps most of all , because from time to time he had insisted that Robbie go below . |
12 | This has usually been rejected , on the grounds that other sources suggest that Hastings was executed rather than murdered-Armstrong going so far as to suggest that such a murder would be un-English and that Mancini has been led astray by Italian precedents . |
13 | This has usually been rejected , on the grounds that other sources suggest that Hastings was executed rather than murdered-Armstrong going so far as to suggest that such a murder would be un-English and that Mancini has been led astray by Italian precedents . |
14 | It was not only on the question of legatine authority that Anselm went further , and was more explicit , than Lanfranc . |
15 | And Glentoran went even closer when Gary Smyth hit the inside of the post after Keenan had fumbled a Hillis cross . |
16 | He explained his change of mind by pointing to the danger that if Stockholm went ahead without the Allied socialists , the case for the Allied war effort would be lost by default : |
17 | Tim and Chuck went ahead to Kupang to start work on the Tri-Pacer . |
18 | ‘ Well , we met him in Australia , and Sarah went away with him . |
19 | If Germany goes ahead , it will grow even nastier . |
20 | The feeling that if William went now , by himself , and she stayed , that would be it . |
21 | That 's why Alec and Salome went then , so they could look around . |
22 | That was a bit of a shock , cos I was dreaming about summat about a train and Marie going away , and then suddenly I came to and found myself in the station . |
23 | In fact , as he probably expected , the Caxton Hall meeting went excellently and Paddington went very badly . |
24 | ‘ Sagittarians and Geminis go well together , in all ways , ’ Myra said , her voice loaded with significance . |
25 | Naylor stepped to one side , and Travis went hurriedly out of sight . |
26 | Whatever made you think that the idea — of course quite impossible , though for the sake of argument we will not imagine it so — myself and Edward going away together was simply unconventional . |
27 | They looked pretty secure when he and Eddery went clear a furlong out . |
28 | Racing and Ireland go together — it is said there are as many horses as people ( three and a half million ) — and racecourse crowds are extremely knowledgeable about the sport . |
29 | He took her arm and Maggie went forward slowly . |
30 | Second , God guides through other Christians , as he did in Acts 6 when the whole multitude chose the Seven , or in Acts 13 when the Spirit spoke to the church at Antioch about the need for Paul and Barnabas to go abroad . |