Example sentences of "[noun] to go [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Although the policy review will be endorsed by the conference , giving Neil Kinnock the freedom to go on to the offensive against the Conservatives in the run-up to the next general election , there are a number of areas of potential conflict .
2 They are likely to be allowed less freedom to go out on the streets and stay out late .
3 She begs her sister to go up to the top of the tower of the castle and look out for them , and keeps calling out to her , ‘ Anne , sister Anne , dost thou see nothing coming ? ’
4 Then he pulled down the oven door , smelt the sweet , fatty smell of the meat and knew that it was probably this very fact that accounted for his decision to go through with the business .
5 But you must you must have been asked dozens of times to go back into the pop concert field ?
6 Times to go down to the pits and the sun came out .
7 Professor John Ashworth , vice-chairman of the committee of vice-chancellors and principals ( CVCP ) , also urged Mr MacGregor to use ‘ a heaven-sent opportunity to go back to the drawing board and look at the entire issue of how students are supported — grants , loans and fees . ’
8 Well erm David said that he did n't think the strike would have gone on or they would n't have the heart to go on without the women ?
9 ‘ Do I have your permission to go up to the belvedere and look around ? ’
10 ‘ Brother , ’ he whispered , ‘ we have the Regent 's permission to go down to the Springall house now , to examine and take anything we wish .
11 In such an optimistic climate it was easier for national governments and interest groups to go along with the economic ambitions of the EEC ; it was not seen as a great threat to their own concerns .
12 They inevitably knock on the door on the one evening of the month when you 're dolled up in your glad rags to go out on the town .
13 ‘ Get Hawkins to go down in the cellar and help thee , and mind th'do n't get up to any pranks . ’
14 Sarah had come to the car with them and Julia asked Pat to go back to the reception .
15 It is just a matter of how you can build up the Kuwaiti nationality to go along with the growing community in the country and we were just a developing country .
16 Robbie spent the afternoon as Fen had suggested , and when she alighted from the stifling , ancient bus crowded with country folk , she felt in no mood to go back to the boat .
17 If nothing else we hope that by attending college the students will have gained the confidence and determination to go out into the community and demand that changes be made .
18 Calling for the " strengthening of ties between the party and the masses " , it made seven demands : ( i ) adherence to the mass line ( i.e. policy making and implementation in line with the interests of the people ) ; ( ii ) officials to go down among the masses ; ( iii ) the strengthening of socialist democracy and the legal system ; ( iv ) fighting official corruption ; ( v ) supervision , internal and from outside ; ( vi ) the need for exemplary behaviour from party members ; and ( vii ) raising political ( Marxist ) awareness .
19 Could that be when Wetherby left his room to go down to the kitchen ? ’
20 By the time she had got her cases up to the guest room , made the bed up and sorted out her food supplies it was beginning to get dark and , although she had a burning desire to go up to the studio , caution prevailed .
21 Almost without being aware of it I 'd progressed from the hesitancy of my first few days there to a strong positive desire to go down to the starting gate : any starting gate , anywhere .
22 ‘ They want Daddy to go along to the police-station at Poltown to make sure the sacks are the ones stolen , ’ said Mrs. Yatton .
23 They had turned as if by common consent to go back into the cottage when the lights of a car , driven fast , came over the southern rise of the road .
24 No need to go on about the band in this preamble .
25 It roots lay far back , in the rise of Prussia to the position of leading power in Germany , but there is no need to go back beyond the Congress of Berlin .
26 There was no need to go back to the shop .
27 The present system may not be perfect but it has worked pretty well and would be capable of improvement and adjustment without the need to go back to the drawing board . ’
28 For them , he said , there was a need to go back to the basics of spelling , grammar , punctuation and arithmetic .
29 This phenomenon , which we call ‘ cognitive trial-and-error ’ , requires a deductive process to go on inside the mind of the animal without its actually trying different behaviours .
30 Home is the centre of my life , a place to go out to the world from , a place to return to .
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