Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] go [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Given that the Prime Minister correctly said last night that Maastricht will be an important stage on the road to even closer European union , what does he say today to those of his right hon. Friends who say that he has already gone far enough down the road to political and monetary union and , in their words , we should stay where we are ? |
2 | The man who , in order to understand the inner world of a cannibal tribe , has partaken of the practice of cannibalism , has probably gone too far : he can never quite be one of his own folk again . |
3 | ‘ It was a huge blow to their pride to discover how far behind they had fallen during isolation — yet coach John Williams has now gone too far the other way . |
4 | ‘ You 'd better know — unofficially — that an alert for Tweed has now gone out secretly to our counter-espionage friends and certain police chiefs in Europe . |
5 | One ARENA spokesman has even gone so far as to suggest that there are nine to ten women in the party for every man . |
6 | and snap and this , this would go off and you 'd be sat there going right then , you actually |
7 | For instance , the playing time per hour at Wimbledon has dropped from 7.18 minutes in the 1970's to 3.55 minutes , whereas at the US Open , which used to be played on grass , it has actually gone up slightly from 8.14 minutes to 8.18 minutes . |
8 | And instead of just being here round the top , this has actually gone round here too , by the looks of it . |
9 | One such protagonist has recently gone so far as to claim that Aristotle 's Phantasmata — the mental images that are involved in most or all mental activities — are identical with the symbols on which computational procedures are carried out . |
10 | ‘ I think you 'd better go indoors now , ’ he said , as gently as a mother . |
11 | If they thought er well I 'd better go round just in case and she might need something or she might she might just want to talk or whatever you know . |
12 | ‘ I 'd better go round there and apologise right away . ’ |
13 | ‘ We 'd better go in anyway or we 'll end up having to sit in the shade for the rest of the week . ’ |
14 | You 'd better go home again . ’ |
15 | Sometimes he would last out until the end of Newsnight , and other nights it would be earlier when he said , ‘ I think I 'd better go home now . ’ |
16 | I 'd better go home now , Mrs Hurst . ’ |
17 | ‘ Well you 'd better go home then and get your tomato ketchup . ’ |
18 | ‘ I think I 'd better go back now , Ben , ’ she said . |
19 | And we 'd better go back now . |
20 | ‘ If you want to run that video and get to bed before daybreak we 'd better go down now . ’ |
21 | She 'd better go down quickly before he started to get suspicious . |
22 | We 'd better go now otherwise in a rush . |
23 | It was followed by a strange feeling of detachment , as if she 'd suddenly gone somewhere else . |
24 | I mean , we 'd just gone straight away well in fact , we fell asleep down here that 's why we went . |
25 | She 'd just gone down there to look for any good-natured sucker . |
26 | He 'd just gone down there because er . |
27 | ‘ You 'd best go home now , lassie , ’ he said . |
28 | His mother reassured him , 'people often go down there with their dogs ; do n't worry , I 'm sure he would n't hurt you , but perhaps you should n't go down there for a week or two , David . ’ |
29 | you see him pull this thing and he just says well going out again , so I do n't know . |
30 | Returning about tea time , he 'd then gone out once more to deliver some computer disks for another project he was running in Heanor . |