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

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1 A moire fringe unit monitors the horizontal azimuth of the beam as it sweeps so that it does not go out of alignment .
2 Much of Thatcherism is common sense and it should not go out of fashion .
3 The Australian singer 's manager , Mr Ray East , said Donovan would accept payment of the remainder over 18 months in a gesture aimed at ensuring that the magazine did not go out of business .
4 A seller who accepted an unlimited liability for economic loss on many of his transactions would soon go out of business .
5 There are fears that the Second Division club , £1.3m in debt , could finally go out of business today after a long-running saga of financial troubles at Underhill .
6 It was confidently predicted that some firms , particularly the smaller ones , would also go out of business as a consequence of the 1985 round of price cutting .
7 Since E ' ; lies below the corresponding point on LAC at the output Q ' ; , the monopolist is making losses and would rather go out of business .
8 Like many mills , its comparatively remote position , coupled with oil price rises in the late 1950s to early 1960s , plus increasing competition from the big producers at Gloucester , caused the mill to eventually go out of business .
9 They are absolutely crippling and some clubs could even go out of business .
10 If we can not win that support , we may as well go out of business , and it is our duty now at all events to make the best of the situation which has arisen and to see that everything is done to make our Party what Disraeli called it — and what , if it is to have any existence , It must be — a really national party .
11 I mean if you , in the agricultural depression of the nineteen thirties , that 's a depression that lasted erm , the best part of a decade , you know , but farmers did n't go out of production you know , for about five , six , seven years down the line , because virtually all of their assets were tied up in fixed assets .
12 Roy Hattersley , Labour 's deputy leader , said : ‘ I want to look very carefully at the idea to make sure that clubs do n't go out of business and that large families on low incomes can still go to football matches . ’
13 I do n't understand why people do n't see the difference — good design wo n't go out of fashion . ’
14 These more loyal long service employees had an intuitive feeling that the division would ultimately go out of business in the UK if it continued to operate in the way it had behaved over the previous ten years .
15 It 's frequently the case that where this happens the company never regains its market position and can ultimately go out of business . ’
16 It 's like ‘ Bridge Over Troubled Water ’ , Simon & Garfunkel , will never go out of fashion . ’
17 ‘ It will never go out of fashion , ’
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