Example sentences of "[verb] go [adv prt] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 We do n't want to go up the ass of that flour lorry in front . ’
2 I do n't want to go down the village , I want to go down the shops .
3 I want to go back the year , nineteen hundred , and let's hear the causes of death , because when many infectives caused by viruses and the bacteria , the life expectancy for a male was fifty , and for a women was fifty four .
4 Yeah right it ca n't get out it has to go down the pipe .
5 Before I left the Lock and I was on nights the sirens went one night and this was before they stopped going down the shelter we went down the air raid shelter that is , now , is the cellar to the club at Bloxwich Lock 's club !
6 Somebody said , well the Harbourmaster 's not coming , I said , right go back to work and that 's the time I , that 's the time when we had the first baby and erm , that 's the first one we lost and anyhow they put me off for a fortnight and erm I went down to , I say go up the Board of Guardians , that was like the D H S S but a little bit lower and I just start to buy this house soon as I said to this bloke , he live in the council house over here this bloke , what was interviewing me
7 I 'm quite happy to see if we can what we can do , I ca n't guarantee that my Right Honourable Friend will take a different view , but I 'm content to see what we can do and report if your Lordships think that that is suitable , but if we were to do that My Lord , I think it would mean erm er it would mean that all these amendments which are grouped together should not in fact be , be put t to the vote , I mean that means ever er er all your Lordships because I do n't think it would be very fair if I were to say that I would move mine and the Noble Lord , Lord MacIntosh were c to come along and move his amendment and mine meanwhile has gone down the drainpipe and I do n't think that that would be particularly funny , but the Noble Lord , Lord MacIntosh I 'm sure would n't do such a dastardly thing like that !
8 Hughie said : ‘ You can say that shipbuilding in Whitby has gone down the sewer .
9 Well this man something wrong and he er had an appointment with a Girran man who was Professor of medicine in Glasgow , he 'd gone up the ladder you know and finished .
10 ‘ Until this evening , ’ he said huskily , and turned to go back the way they had come .
11 What I 'm going to do is to examine now I 'm going to go up the collar bone first over the shoulder pad , T-shirt with a shoulder pad .
12 Unless the bank see new management , Virginia , the company your grandparents established is rapidly going to go down the pan — ’
13 Yes I am the outcome of it all is that she 's waiting on the wall , getting piles and I 'm going to go down the shop with her .
14 we happened to go up the stair and er , the door was answered
15 I 've got to go up the town , like
16 When it was so cold in the winding shed at the mines that the men begged to go down the pit to get warm .
17 ‘ I can remember going down the Speakeasy with The Clash to look for models to give us cocaine and blow jobs .
18 She kicked off the wellingtons , which was easy enough , and began to go up the ladder .
19 now if I was to go there and back that 's eighty pence , I mean I could get , for , for that e extra eighty pence I could get a few things in there that are dearer but I mean I like going down the town anyway and just wander and go back but I do get a few more bits in there now than I did .
20 ‘ We 'll have to go down the off-licence . ’
21 You 'll having going down the bottom of the road here in a minute .
22 And , oh , Ellie , if you had n't been here , I 'd have gone down the aisle looking such a fright … ’
23 ‘ If they set out from Tara at the hour they intended , they will have gone down the forest road hours earlier . ’
24 ‘ Prices are used as a barrier so that the sort of people we do n't want go over the road , ’ he said .
25 And if the faculty chose to go down the specialist qualification route , he added , it would go some way towards restoring credibility in the auditing profession by ensuring that standards are raised .
26 Well that 's right , yes , and the other thing as well , I should n't really be telling you this , , because it 's bad news for us but , if you in fact write a long , rambling press release , what you will find is that the journalist will almost , almost certainly go three-quarters of the way down it to find the real story which is hidden in there , and occasionally that real story is purposely hidden down in there , and you know you look at any council minutes , and the real story is always , inevitably hidden down there , because it 's the bit that somebody does n't want people to know about , and so journalists are naturally trained to go down the bit to find out what 's it about .
27 I mean , well if you have n't got gauze in your first aid box , but you could have something like a Mediwipe or you might be able to use , open up your bandage and you can use , you know , several pieces of this , just keep going down the bandage and then you know clean it and get rid of that bit , okay , another clean bit okay , so you can adapt with whatever you 've got in your first aid box , yes , and you wo n't necessarily have scissors to hand so you 'll have to do whatever you 've got and the little Mediwipes are very useful for that , but do n't use one Mediwipe for seventy five grazes , okay , one Mediwipe for one wipe and then discard , okay ?
28 The mortar men were not trained as Heavy Weapons Troops would be later in the war , but this did not prevent Sergeant Ramsey from getting off a bomb that appeared to go down the hotel chimney , reportedly causing a dozen or more casualties .
29 These ones up in the town , did the boatmen used to have to go up the town to find
30 I start going back the way I came .
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