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 . |