Example sentences of "[noun] [vb base] go [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Well he lives in that little cottage at the bottom of the steep pitch just past the green , ’ Joe continued with a grin , ‘ as he staggers down the hill his legs have to go faster and faster to stop him falling on his face . ’
2 We 'll go back inside anyway when these gentlemen have gone past and .
3 The snakes have gone now and Laverne stands up again with difficulty .
4 When the youngsters want to go outside and play they have to leave via the backdoor which opens on to a busy road .
5 The elements are brought to them , whereas the Episcopalian and the Catholic worshippers have to go forward for theirs .
6 A little later on , when all the relatives have gone home and the number of attentive friends at the time of the funeral has dwindled , it might be the time when the bereaved begin to reflect on their changed circumstances and try to evaluate how they feel both about themselves and the person who has died .
7 Nanny and rotten news seem to go together if you ask me .
8 On Tyneside , Tories in Wallsend say leaflets have gone astray or not been delivered .
9 At the same time , Phil Ledler , Stuart Aaronson and G. Lenoir have gone further and shown that in Burkitt 's lymphoma cells the myc gene becomes linked with DNA-encoding parts of the antibody molecule .
10 Some thinkers have gone further and have even said that Abelard 's idea of sin is superficial and inadequate .
11 Some commentators have gone further and pointed to the relatively high proportion of UK production which has been exported and to the high ratio of exports of GDP in international terms .
12 Nurse prescribing will save the waste of time that he has described when district nurses have to go backwards and forwards to doctors , and will allow them to give their time to more beneficial activities , rather than wasting petrol on such journeys .
13 The courts have gone further than might be suggested by this statement .
14 On occasions the courts have gone further and disqualified a member of a tribunal or board " if there are circumstances so affecting a person acting in a judicial capacity as to be calculated to create in the mind of a reasonable man a suspicion of that person 's impartiality , those circumstances are sufficient to disqualify although in fact no bias exists " ; see Law v. Chartered Institute of Patent Agents [ 1919 ] 2 Chapter 276 ; Metropolitan Properties Co .
15 Some investment houses have gone further and actively marketed cash-based roll-up funds .
16 ‘ And the women who dig the roads have to go home and be screwed by their husbands afterwards as part of the job .
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