Example sentences of "goes on " in BNC.

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1 Pater 's measured prose goes on to connect the picture with drawings by Verrocchio , speculate on the artist and the sitter , and wonder about how long the picture was in progress .
2 This is from one of the letters written by Shelley in Italy , which goes on to describe the painting of St Cecilia by Raphael :
3 The writer goes on to make further points about the picture 's elements .
4 The lyric is not generically debarred from standing out against the state , or from taking a generous interest in what goes on in the world .
5 He goes on to say to Maria that
6 Levi goes on to insist that the real witnesses are those who died in the camps , and that those prisoners who did not were mostly compromised people or privileged people : Solzhenitsyn is cited as making the same point about the pridurki — the ‘ prominents ’ of the Gulag system .
7 Later on in the profession itself the process goes on at a different level .
8 Part of the overall argument of this book is that , as the Roman catholic church is principal validator or legitimator of the Southern state along with the concept of the national entity , what that state goes on to do in the field of social ethics can not be separated out from the responsibilities of the church .
9 But the metaphor goes on haunting us , he wrote .
10 That part of the package has to be right , but it 's impossible to separate it from the consultation that goes on between the customer and the supplier before the sale is clinched .
11 My mind just goes on and on …
12 ‘ Partly common or garden jealousy , I think , and partly because they tend not to get involved in all the politics that goes on . ’
13 The book now goes on to my sister and what happens next is up to her .
14 He goes on to argue that the bourgeoisie have always used sections from within the ‘ dangerous classes ’ to control those who are overtly troublesome , perhaps following the maxim that ‘ it takes a thief to catch a thief ’ , when he argues : ‘ for one and a half centuries the bourgeoisie offered the following choices : you can go to prison or join the Army ; you can go to prison or go to the colonies ; you can go to prison or you can join the police ’ ( ibid. 23 ) .
15 He becomes crucially aware that they have little need of any critical analysis , for as Benyon ( ibid. 23 ) goes on to point out ,
16 The circular goes on to point out that the list is not exhaustive and suggests other courses may be appropriate .
17 This transformational stance , she goes on to argue , allows the ethnographer to have a personal discourse on aspects which are outside the usual limits of the body or corpus of collected material .
18 The work goes on again , I see , now that the — holiday — is over .
19 It is this which produces Leonard 's startling use of juxtaposition , which goes on to become a disavowal technique . )
20 Thus , one might characterize one 's grasp on the experience of seeming to see a red object as something is going on in me ( I do n't know what it is ) which is like what goes on when a red object is acting on my eyes ; or … like what goes on in me to make me behave in a red-object-appropriate way .
21 Thus , one might characterize one 's grasp on the experience of seeming to see a red object as something is going on in me ( I do n't know what it is ) which is like what goes on when a red object is acting on my eyes ; or … like what goes on in me to make me behave in a red-object-appropriate way .
22 But Fodor goes on to argue that much of what can be said about reflexes can also be said about processes which we would normally regard as ‘ cognitive ’ rather than ‘ neurological ’ or ‘ behavioural ’ : the parsing of heard sentences , for example .
23 He then goes on to fit the tenons to the mortise saying ‘ fit the stretchers to the posts and repeat the exercise on the mullions . ’
24 As time goes on , the Government envisages more and more hospitals becoming NHS Trusts , with powers to negotiate what services they will provide .
25 While the banks and bond holders battle it out , the reorganisation of the company into two divisions , betting and pub retailing , goes on apace .
26 Inevitability , at once psychological and religious , enters ( so the letter goes on ) after the crime has been committed , in the shape of ‘ the truth of God and the law of nature ’ which compel Raskolnikov first to be exiled from the humanity he has outraged , and then to confess and accept the public consequences of confession as the only way to become a man among men again .
27 Murderous and anguished work — the thinking that goes on between the rehearsal and the deed itself .
28 Of course he is incompetent , and as well as being swept along in the muddle and uproar he shares ‘ our town 's ’ positive transpersonal complicities in what goes on here .
29 He goes on
30 Mr Saunders goes on to admit that broadcasters are not entirely blameless in this respect : ‘ More should no doubt have been done at an earlier stage in development of RDS to give the receiver manufacturing industry some guidelines setting out the minimum levels of RDS performance that should be achieved ’ .
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