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

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1 All three pupils are now following A-level course work at Aquinas College , Stockport and hope eventually to go on to university .
2 The new puppy is very timid with strangers but now she is old enough to go out for walks , we have found she is growling at other dogs .
3 The baby was strong enough to go back to Riverstown with a monthly nurse after six weeks and he was duly baptized a Protestant in the Church of Ireland in Naas .
4 We then elected to stay on and opened up those two houses ( Bombay Burma ) for thirty officers who had been turned out of hospital from the fighting lower down , and Pop opened up St Michael 's school for about eighty soldiers until they were fit enough to go back to duty .
5 and er , it was gone eleven I would of thought , anyway he stopped and I slept like a log , got up at twenty past six , but erm , it 's a strange thing because one of those came last evening and it parked outside George 's , now I said yesterday , when Alan goes to work , it 's not long after six normally to go up to London and that
6 Arriving at Halling he was warned not to go on to Rochester as there was danger of his being captured on the road .
7 You 'd be mad not to go over to Paris and settle it .
8 ‘ I can remember Nick as a small boy , maybe five , begging me not to go back to London that Monday morning and to stay at home with them .
9 My resolve not to go back into education hardened , if anything , rather than softened , as I became more and more determined that the sacrifice I had made was not going to be in vain .
10 We 'll need somewhere dry to spend the night if we 're not to go down with pneumonia .
11 ‘ We drummed it in to all three of our children not to go off with strangers and Johanna was sensible enough to listen , ’ said Robert .
12 Her early school reports were peppered with comments , complimentary or judgemental , depending on the teacher : ‘ Margaret has a very active imagination ’ , ‘ Margaret must learn not to go off into day-dreams ’ , ‘ Margaret does not yet seem to have learned the difference between fact and fiction ’ .
13 I reckon the nuns beat her you are not to go out with boys !
14 As they passed one of the Mason 's guards , they startled him out of dozing , and he hastily got up , cursing them and telling them not to go out of sight .
15 ‘ The best thing for all of us is for me just to go back to London .
16 But he did n't want just to go back to Hereford Road and drink it on his own .
17 Now when you say right across , I mean you you 've ta seen the photos of , of er shell pitted ground with the nineteen fourteen eighteen war , well that 's how Bentley was then cos it had been rooted for coal and nineteen twenty six strike everybody got it all out cos there was a lot of top surface coal , course it was just left there was a lot of mole holes , stuff from the furnaces when they tip tipped the slag , it was up and down and there was Buttons Brook , was n't it Buttons Brook across there , called Buttons Brook there was a pool across there called Leg of Lamb but I mean it , it er you can imagine what I 'm trying to say , what the ground was like to go over in pitch black night , to go over there and we went out and course we was issued with er ammunition which was one of the o only times I can remember when we went really out prepared with live ammunition , and er we scouted and scouted till daybreak and we did n't find nothing .
18 Early potatoes should be sprouted indoors now to go out in spring .
19 The hon. Gentleman would do well to go back to Bradford and ask the authority one or two questions .
20 And them other doctors said I were n't to go back up London for no operation not till I was Al , else I 'd be dead as a herring . ’
21 Furthermore , it suggest that those people who had become unemployed because of a temporary job coming to an end were just as likely to be unemployed for only a short spell and then to go back to work , and that they were less likely to have been continuously unemployed throughout the following year ( Moylan/Millar/Davies , 1984 ) .
22 Next month : how to go out of business in one week .
23 Watch out , too , for sales staff or reps who encourage you to ‘ buy now ’ , implying that prices are about to go up on April 5 .
24 ‘ Do you realize , ’ he said , ‘ that the whole school is about to go up in flames today ? ’
25 It turned out that he had locked himself out of his room which was likely to be embarrassing as I , for one , was not about to go down to reception for a key for him .
26 Selkirk threw him a cloak , telling the clerk to make himself as comfortable as possible and Corbett slept fitfully , waking once or twice to go up on deck to vomit his dinner into the sea amidst the jeering catcalls of the night watch .
27 I am afraid I can not bear just yet to go back to Baldersdale .
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