Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] go for a " in BNC.

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1 Our redfaced friend , said the policeman , chose the wrong time in the wrong town to go for a drunken walkabout in the road .
2 However , it is still difficult to imagine the slim person going for a real blow-out , or having dinner , going to the pub , then calling into an Indian Restaurant for a further meal before going home .
3 Use the extra time to go for a walk around the block , or even just round the building .
4 Odd place to go for a midnight stroll , sir , ’ said the older one sarkily .
5 He was first jailed and then compelled to leave Rome ; he is said to have died in the Punic city of Utica , a remarkable place to go for a disgraced Roman intellectual ( St Jerome , Chron. a. 1816 , p. 135 Helm ) .
6 Alan Ball admitted his men had it all to do after his men crashed to South Africa , the Australian wicket went for a duck as a defending champion slumped said we are going to have to do it the hard way now , we just did n't play very , we did n't get it together against New Zealand in the first match and today we were never in the picture , our brothers never really had a chance of any attempt of a hundred and seventy , but full credit to South Africa they are a rate , a better to side
7 the Bank is now seen very much more as a bank to save with and a good place to go for a mortgage .
8 It is more likely the Goblin will be smashed apart — which although sad is considered a good way to go for a Goblin and infinitely better than being eaten by a peckish troll .
9 ‘ It 's a long way to go for a 45-minute service and a reception — even if you 're not 92 years old , ’ said one of her aides , who insisted that her absence was not intended as a snub .
10 Uplands kept its wholesaling operation going for a few years after I left , but it does n't exist any more ; I think the day of the really small wholesaler is gone . ’
11 You 'll given them a new target to go for a ?
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