Example sentences of "[noun pl] go [adv prt] [art] " in BNC.

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1 His running tore QPR to shreds and he took a Waddle ball after 30 minutes to go down the left and set up Bright for a virtual tap in , his eighth goal in 14 games .
2 And I used to go down you used to see all the mams and kids going down the moors here , taking their dad 's tea , down in the fields , so they could have a bit of something and then finish as got dark .
3 So therefore you got motorbikes going up the ramps , which were n't designed for that .
4 H. P. I 've seen inspectors go round the police huts and examine the First Aid Kit .
5 The man who 's lived and worked in the same quarter of the city all his life , has seen his images go around the world and into the hearts of millions .
6 Trading vessels went down the canal every week to Grimsby and Hull and every month to London .
7 Everything in the supermarkets goes up every week .
8 British Coal refused to let 150 miners go down the pit at Silverhill , Mansfield .
9 ‘ The silk scarves go around the neck . ’
10 so you could pull it up and down and the effects went out the bottom of the tube , the tube came up like that and it came over , and like that and then the shade would be like that and then you could swing it round
11 Well it 's just the thing to keep the operators going on the night shift .
12 With activities going on every day and most evenings we hardly ever saw our two .
13 ‘ Ringwood 's history with dogs goes back a bit further .
14 Fucking hell Jesus Christ oh dear , you know what that means econom , the America 's biggest airlines goes down the toilet
15 But so clearly visible and definitely new since the previous evening was a set of footprints , and looking around , a set of tracks , small hob-nailed boot tracks going up the staircase to the top and not coming down .
16 You see , see they do most dogs go down the fields .
17 A large proportion of balls went down the leg side , which was not the ideal means of curtailing the driving of Boon , Briers and Whitaker .
18 The literature on the professions goes back a long way , but seems to have reached a peak in the 1960s and 1970s ( see , for example , Etzioni 1969 ; Jackson 1970 ) , perhaps because the professions were at an apogee of esteem at that point , before the attacks of Illich ( 1977 ) and others who , like Shaw many years before , accused them of establishing a ‘ radical monopoly ’ in the name of meeting people 's ‘ needs ’ .
19 Once it happens we we , our credibility with our customers goes out the window does n't it ?
20 Collective self-help and co-operative ways of tackling problems go back a long way .
21 His memories go back a long , long way . ’
22 Through such developments , a cadre of AEA managers went up the commercial learning curve .
23 As soon as steam trains were invented , up and running , they became the tools of the industrialist and of the punter on holiday , noisy , smelly , usually late , and the last word in ways to go down the coast .
24 After a long week , I received a phone call at lunchtime to say that the specimen was at the airport about to be collected , and I made arrangements to go up the following day .
25 ‘ Their minds are like trains going along a track which here and there has a broken connection , ’ said the nurse .
26 S A U profits go up a bit because you get a credit from er
27 Make sure the brushes go back the right way up — match them with the side you have not yet removed .
28 ‘ The accounts go out every six months , ’ he reminded her with a frown .
29 That 's why so many of our sons went down the mine — to stop the family becoming homeless .
30 For years , I have wanted the Government to reduce the speeds of lorries and buses going down the M1 and the M6 , but Europe did it .
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