Example sentences of "[noun] goes [adv prt] [to-vb] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But as Ian goes back to comply Koquillion uses his jewelled weapon to cause an avalanche , sealing up the cave .
2 Mr Mosse goes on to describe fund raising for the boiler .
3 Freud goes on to use McDougall 's analysis of the positive aspects of groups , the crowd being distinguished from the positive group by the lack of organization found in groups which have been positive in their effects .
4 Phillario goes on to denounce Mira 's shape as so many mountains , and then looks into her mouth :
5 The angel goes on to inform Mary that she is to have a child .
6 However , Miller goes on to cast doubt on the status of such individualist explanations when he suggests that holist explanations are the stuff of social science , whereas individualist ones are something else .
7 The book goes on to quote Stephen Jay Gould , the noted Harvard palaeontologist , as saying : We avoid the excellent question , What good is 5 percent of an eye ? by arguing that the possessor of such an incipient structure did not use it for sight .
8 Americas Watch stated that ‘ As best we can determine , torture as that term is generally understood is not practised in Nicaragua as a means of eliciting information or confessions , nor as a form of punishment ’ ( Americas Watch 1984 ) but its report goes on to detail cases where harsh interrogation techniques were used ( see also Amnesty International 1982 ) .
9 The report goes on to recommend changes in industrial conferences , and I 've already mentioned that , to ensure that there is no wasteful overlap between the two , and Robert in seconding the motion will go into some of the details of the er , way the new conferences will operate erm , following me .
10 Berger goes on to suggest ways in which this ‘ psychologism ’ fits the experience of people in modern society and affects their self-understanding .
11 Sulphur goes on to produce acid rain .
12 From this initial thought the sociologist goes on to consider baptism as a ‘ rite of passage ’ and scans the library in both the sociology and the social anthropology sections for previous writings which will give more information about baptism in other cultures and also about the significance of rites of passage in both primitive and advanced societies .
13 Seaman comments that that presentation Another and concordant view is recorded by Lichtheim : Lichtheim goes on to quote Pease , then Secretary of the Fabian Society , as saying : ‘ We were thus in a position to welcome the formation of working class Socialist societies , but it is certain that they would never have welcomed us ’ ; and to add , perhaps unkindly : ‘ Beatrice Potter — a rich , spoiled , arrogant young woman with more beauty than brains — was determined to have as little as possible to do with the working class . ’
14 Let's hope that EMI goes on to restore Barbirolli 's stereo account of the Fifth Symphony with the Philharmonia .
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