Example sentences of "[pron] go in the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 When he came alongside a trawler 25 miles out from the English coast he asked : ‘ Am I going in the right direction for France ? ’
2 She paused , then said , ‘ I go in the big graveyard and look at the stones .
3 Well the earlier I go in the quicker I 'm home .
4 Can I go in the rolling mills ?
5 Then I left the surveying surveyor civil engineering I went in the black gang .
6 but when I went in the other week , they all sit in a circle like that , then there 's a space and the teacher stands there and she was telling a story about the independent princess who does n't fall in love with the prince in the end , it was a quite funny story
7 I went in the first on the right and closed the door .
8 ‘ Here , give over , ’ said Dolly , ‘ I do n't need no scrubbin' brush , I went in the public baths two weeks ago .
9 Well I say , if we did and you just took it in and I went in the next day and picked it up .
10 We can contrast the Government 's approach with Labour 's approach , which goes in the opposite direction , once again leading industry and the public as lambs to the militant trade unionist slaughter .
11 He also expressed irritation about the way Tony seemed to have let himself go in the last few months , since he had become unemployed .
12 She goes in the thirteenth and hopefully will be out the twenty third , I realize this is a big operation but I want Cheryl to come along anyway , book the table , stay with us , come with us If she could n't make it which she 'll be in so I do understand that
13 Also racing in Holland is Liverpool Women 's 10k winner Suzanne Rigg ( Warrington AC ) , who goes in the 10,000 metres .
14 you know , and so I avoided her , but I would tell her , but if I saw her I would say Jenny I must admit I did see you going in The General but I did n't come out because I was so upset , but I , I wonder what she 's doing , cos she , I heard she 's got her own business , but I ca n't see that .
15 ‘ Are n't you going in the wrong direction ? ’
16 Where do you go in the 1960s ?
17 I thought you were an experienced professional or I 'd never have let you go in the first place !
18 More than likely , you came out of the cinema wondering why you went in the first place .
19 On the criteria we 've been talking about today , so find yourself a partner that you have n't worked with today somebody erm if you go in the same group that Kathy 's in because then if it comes up to four o'clock Kathy wants to go then you can be the other partner you 've got half an hour to put on one sheet of paper clearly and concisely what we 've done on communications .
20 The more cycles per second , the higher you go in the so-called spectrum of frequencies .
21 Instead of following Thérèse down the road that led to the centre of the village , out again , and so , eventually , to the Martin farm , she went in the other direction .
22 She went in the opposite direction from the rock drawings , her planned destination when she had first conceived her scheme .
23 And how long would we go in the last half hour ?
24 Ann 's probably back in the library , or in in a different shop we usually shop together in different sometimes I go in different shops , sometimes we go in the same ones .
25 We went in the best seats .
26 I never took him again because as we went in the big dog bounded from his mistress ' side and produced a particularly sonorous blast as if in greeting .
27 Yeah I went to , we went in the French Pyrenees this January .
28 Well I mo moved because promotion was in the line for me , I was in the Royal Marine Police in island depot in Plymouth and er I 'd been put on plain clothes work and I 'd been doing acting sergeant you know when the sergeant was off sick and all that business and er I 'd put , been put in for this to move because we had a two bedroom bungalow but the twins were getting big and I realized that we 'd have to have another bedroom you know , very soon and er , this seemed an opportunity to get a house and also in Plymouth , that Plymouth was a naval town , you see , there was still those days there was still kind of a , a lower deck of sons , what they call lower deckers , in other words you know people in the lower deck of the navy , their sons did n't really have much , ever have much chance of getting into places like Dartmouth College or Cramwell to do as cadets , well the headmaster at Regent Street School had said to me that Keith was very keen on flying , he was aeroplane mad you see , and , he wanted to go in the Royal Air Force , well he said to me he said oh no put him in the Navy and as a chief art as an artificer , so I said oh no , I said if he goes in the Navy or the service I want him to go in the front door not like me the back door , I had ambition for him
29 And he er he 'd made all that lace , well then instead of him going in the First World War and making the net which was used you see his lace trade all went .
30 ‘ Just watch him go in the 200 metres .
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