Example sentences of "[modal v] go [adv prt] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 they pay , they pay , they are paying me a little bit , I think it ought to go up in price a bit though myself
2 There are many young women and men in the Black movement who claim that the practice should go on in order to maintain African-traditions .
3 There is widespread ignorance about what does or should go on in schools or universities .
4 It would be a shame if Michael Cimino should go down in history as the man who sunk a studio with Heaven 's Gate .
5 This guarantee covers the period of time in which defects will be remedied , the procedure that the buyer must go through in order to take advantage of the guarantee , and the remedies which the seller offers in respect of the defects .
6 As Nietzsche wrote , ‘ The Germans are a people of the day before yesterday and the day after tomorrow ’ Germany , like a happy wanderer , must go off in search of its fortune , shaking off parental tutelage and political adolescence .
7 He also reached the 1944 and 46 finals losing to Jimmy Adams and the great Fred Daly but surely the '31 decider must go down in history as one of the most one-sided ever .
8 At this point I must go back in time to record the beginning of my own friendship with Ivy Compton-Burnett .
9 I 'll go over in June .
10 Or it 'll go out in July God knows how we 're gon na do it after SATS in er a a ye at year fourteen .
11 The tapes and conversation details will all become completely anonymous no one will know who 's used the words or whose voice are on the tapes together they will provide a permanent record of how the English language is spoken in the nineteen nineties we 'll go down in posterity , eh ?
12 It only needs someone to knock a window out and the whole thing could go up in flames . ’
13 She wished she could go back in time , to when she and Jezrael had shared a room and secrets after Mom put the lights out .
14 She could go down in history as the leader who pulled us back from the brink . ’
15 When the good news from the Gulf arrived from Saudi Arabia via a Foreign Office cable , ‘ officials checked the rules to ensure the announcement could go out in Mr Major 's name ’ , he said .
16 The things that used to go on in Newmarket .
17 The three of us used to go down in summer to stay and do the haymaking .
18 We 're going to have to talk about what astronomical units are in a moment , but let's go on in terms of size .
19 I half-hoped , half-dreaded the mast would go up in sparks and a bang when the Big Man pulled the lever ; that FAKINTIL had found a way to wrap half a dozen shearing charges around the legs .
20 Building societies themselves always reckoned that , over time , prices would go up in line with people 's incomes — which govern how much they can spend .
21 Well I wa I was n't sure whether to , whether it would go through in time for the case and that 's why I have n't
22 I did , I always said he would go back in time .
23 It was a name that would go down in history .
24 Oil will go up in price again .
25 ‘ Matron will go up in smoke if he does n't . ’
26 ‘ Yes , well luckily for me , Cozy Powell and Neil Murray are into it and we will go out in November and do some gigs .
27 He was the husband of the first woman Prime Minister , but he will go down in history as a wise adviser and a kind man .
28 The meeting was chaired by Betty Sinclair , who reminded the supporters that their objective was to demonstrate for civil rights , for jobs and for houses : ‘ We are asking you to listen to the speakers , and what we have done today will go down in history and in this way we will be more effective in showing the world that we are a peaceful people asking for our civil rights in an orderly manner . '
29 Scotland 's 1954 World Cup team will go down in history as one of the most disastrous and ill-prepared rabble that has ever represented the country abroad .
30 The 1978 World Cup campaign in Argentina will go down in history as the absolute nadir of Scottish football .
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