Example sentences of "[noun] [unc] [noun] to go [adv prt] " in BNC.
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1 | William is humiliated not because he is defeated ( he had half expected this ) but because of the shepherd boy 's refusal to go on hitting him . |
2 | Julia was so interested in the cross-examination that she almost disobeyed Anthony 's instructions to go back to the Campo San Maurizio for lunch and spend the afternoon in bed , but , remembering how weak she had felt the previous evening , she did as he said . |
3 | Then , in addition , it decided it must limit local authorities ' powers to go on increasing local rates . |
4 | Finally , once the client has agreed the schedule with the agency ( which may well be done before the content of the ads is finally agreed ) , it is the media person 's job to go out into the marketplace and buy the press space , the poster sites or the TV , radio or cinema spots . |
5 | Othello , who only has Iago 's word to go on , falls into the trap : So Cassio is displaced . |
6 | LEFT Never ignore a young dog 's request to go out into the back yard because this can cause it to soil around the home , and inhibits the toilet-training process . |
7 | Both of those strands are very much part of volunteering , they 're very much linked with the concept of the active citizen , and there are still lots of voluntary organisations that form and which continue , and which are existing today , which stem entirely from people 's desire to go out there and do something , in their own way . |
8 | They agreed to allow one of the workers in the battered wives ' home to go up there , when she arrived the house was in two feet of water — the pipes had burst . |
9 | The elder Pliny was full of curiosity at first , and planned to sail across in his galley for a closer look , but his nephew was not so keen on the idea , and turned down his uncle 's invitation to go along as well , pleading pressure of work . |
10 | In another area he did actually get a market research firm 's fieldworkers to go round all the houses asking for young men and women in the age group , and while this appeared to give a reasonably accurate sample frame it was also very expensive . |
11 | It is the Enterprise Centre 's intention to go on to develop , for future years , related modules at higher levels which will enable increasingly complex tasks and projects to be undertaken with community partner organisations . |
12 | Any optimism there for teachers ' salaries to go up ? |
13 | He was the seventh seed in the men 's championship to go out in the first two rounds , a record for early exits at the tournament . |
14 | He was the seventh seed in the men 's championship to go out in the first two rounds , a record for early exits at the tournament . |
15 | We had Trimalchio 's feast to go on , described by Nero 's mate Petronius , so we had an idea of what they ate , and let me say that it was as much of a surprise to find they had sausages and black pudding as it was to find out they had concrete . |
16 | The simple truth is that in public buildings , in the streets ( and even in the House of Commons ) , there just are n't enough women 's loos to go around and this begs the equally simple question : why ? |
17 | ‘ Brother , ’ he whispered , ‘ we have the Regent 's permission to go down to the Springall house now , to examine and take anything we wish . |
18 | The growth of the economy — and the problems it caused — persuaded Japanese governments during the 1920s that it was in the country 's interest to go along with the internationalist trend . |
19 | Having mastered aerobatics in his little Deaky before the war , he had gained Hitler 's permission to go on bombing runs , although — boringly — only as a gunner . |