Example sentences of "[verb] go [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.
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1 | I chose a time when I knew the Trunchbull was out of the way teaching the sixth-formers , and I put up my hand and asked to go to the bogs . |
2 | See really all you need to do is pull it , you 've got two posts , how high do you want to go with the posts , about that high ? |
3 | I do n't really want to go over the grounds which you know you would seek to weigh different erm locations . |
4 | I did n't want to go through the arguments for and against . |
5 | Remarkably , when she was given ungrammatical sentences to repeat , she often produced a grammatically correct version : she repeated ‘ She write she mother a letter ’ as ‘ She wrote her mother a letter ’ , and ‘ Do you want to go movies ? ’ as ‘ Do you want to go to the movies ? ’ . |
6 | But I 'm not really planning to be a hermit ; my brother 's coming over soon , and I know he 'll want to go to the islands , so we 'll be in touch . |
7 | You do n't want to go to the police , because you 're afraid they 'll simply get involved in another siege — if you can make them believe you in time , which seems doubtful . |
8 | He does n't want to go to the police . |
9 | That 's why you do n't want to go to the police . |
10 | If you do not want to go to the police , ring Sunday Life on Belfast 331133 ext 4316 and your message will be passed on to the McDermotts . |
11 | As for George Chambers , I 'd prefer to go on the streets than become his . |
12 | Ajdabiyans expected to go to the polls in the winter of 1978–9 , and in anticipation their political activists had drawn up two lists of candidates for each of the fifteen popular committees . |
13 | ‘ I made to go down the stairs to see what was happening . |
14 | If you want to go through the details of assignment and analysis , there are many excellent treatments that will help you , varying in depth from the brief but extremely clear account in Ref. [ 20 ] to long and complicated books on the subject , for example , Ref. [ 21 ] . |
15 | Well I think I 'll go round actually cos they 're queuing up , we want to go to the grocers so er if we go up The Avenue we shall just come past the front of it . |
16 | erm there 's two guys want to go in the Marines in mine anyway and so they 're paying erm , A levels of fifteen hundred quid for one of them . |
17 | In the litter tray they do the same thing , but if it has been used several times without being properly cleaned out this becomes impossible and the cat will then prefer to defecate elsewhere , even if it has to go through the motions of covering its dung with imaginary earth after it has deposited it on a wooden floor or a carpet . |
18 | We did n't , we have n't cos Les has to go through the books and charge |
19 | It 's with not knowing how one is that one has to go to the banks and so on . |
20 | And entertainment as fantasy is not acceptable , though I do n't think everyone has to go to the extremes of U2 or Jimmy Somerville , or whoever it is or whatever their politics . |
21 | For the club handicap player , the 1 and 2-irons , and if something has to go from the woods I would leave out either the driver or 2-wood . |
22 | Right colleagues , I now propose to go round the regions and invite regional speakers on the Labour Party trade union links er document , Liverpool , do you wish to put a speaker in ? |
23 | And how did you know to go for the dolls ' bed ? ’ |
24 | And I , foolish man , felt so rebuffed that I hardly ever tried to go through the barriers . |
25 | I tried to go to the ladies ' room . |
26 | She had n't forgotten going to the pictures with Vernon to see The Song of Bernadette . |
27 | They 'd considered going to the police , but agreed that , after the embarrassing débâcle of the inquest , further accusations from Jacqui against Nigel Steen would sound more like the ramblings of a paranoid than anything else . |
28 | ‘ He always loves going to the races . |
29 | She has recently left home , and whenever they talk about her my parents ' voices are disapproving , as if she has gone off the rails in some way which they do n't specify . |
30 | THE DUKE of Westminster , said to be Britain 's richest man , has resigned from the Conservative Party , claiming it has gone off the rails . |