Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] go [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Even if women do return to work after having children , the majority go to a new employer and often to a job at a lower status than the one they left .
2 Draw up a life table for a cohort of 5000 students showing , for each year of study , the probability of leaving and the expected remaining stay calculated on the assumption that one-tenth of the leavers in any year depart at random times during the year and the remainder go at the end of that year .
3 The signals from the switch go to an inverting DC coupled operational amplifier with lowpass filter characteristics through the addition of a capacitor in parallel with the feedback resistor .
4 Turnouts of over 50% in individual wards were almost commonplace , and in only one ward throughout the metropolitan areas ( Elswick , Newcastle upon Tyne ) did fewer than one in three of the electorate go to the polls .
5 Thus , if Jack and the girl go to the cinema , the descriptions and setting may suggest that Jack is wooing the girl , for instance .
6 At the other side of the wood go through the gate into the field .
7 Opposite the inn go through a gate signed to Aysgarth .
8 to do it though , at the moment go over the
9 Definite , I mean there 's not the sewage go in the river now , I do n't think anyway .
10 Everyone from security guards to nurses and secretaries helped make the day go with a buzz .
11 At no stage does the outer surface of the object go inside the event horizon .
12 It was n't until a week later that I was able to ring John Reeves , vicar of St Luke 's , Cranham , who later said that he was intrigued from the word go by the strange activities we were involved with when he first contacted us .
13 The outcome of the inquiry was a triumphant acceptance of our case and a recommendation that the church go to the Redundant Churches Fund .
14 They correct their own pronunciation , e.g. , fwo to fwog ( for frog ) ; their own morphology , e.g. , the man go to the man going or the man 's going ; and their own lexical choices , e.g. , from ship to boat ( for a rowing-boat ) , or from shoe to sandal ( for a sandal ) .
15 There is a catalogue with an essay by the Tate 's Leslie Parris and profits from the show go to the benefit of the museum .
16 Proceeds from the sale of the book go to the RAF Benevolent Fund .
17 The base and emitter pins of the transistor go through the board holes where shown and are soldered to the foil .
18 Graduate finance trainees joining the company go through a three-year training programme .
19 Roger and I hung back on the hill , watching the rest of the party go into a wood .
20 I , I 've got my views , I 'm sure you 've got yours , and I shall listen later in the morning to the debate , but I would finally say delegates , that I hope you enjoy your stay in Portsmouth , in particular Southsea where most of you are staying if you have a chance go to the rose gardens , have a walk along the sea front there , there it 's magnificent this time of year and a tribute to our staff in our direct works organization for their hard work .
21 A group of children and a dog go to a lonely old house on the sea coast for their summer holidays .
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