Example sentences of "[adj] go [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 New radio anchormen RADIO Maldwyn , the independent radio station for Mid Wales and the Borders , due to go on the air on Thursday July 1 , will have Lee Thompson , 27 , presenting The Breakfast Show between 7am and 11am , Monday to Friday .
2 A recommendation to demolish the block of 1930s-vintage flats where the family lived is due to go to the council 's housing committee on 5 April .
3 The commission 's report , due to go to the president by early February , will eventually be published .
4 Encourage those who are mobile to go to the toilet on their own .
5 But , because the umbilical goes through the basket , the diver can always find his way back .
6 It is , in fact , possible to go beyond the association of these particular principles with democracy , and say that the emergence of politics as we understand it was tied up with the emergence of democracy in ancient Greece .
7 It is not possible to go into the details of the technology involved or to mention all the companies now producing hardware and software for the hotel industry , but to name a few :
8 It is perfectly possible to go through a University career , satisfy the examiners , graduate in the splendour of the Great Hall , and leave as a Bristol graduate without ever once having thought how the whole thing has been organised .
9 The Army 's right to go on the streets is only one of the issues on which Eva Burrows has strong opinions .
10 I mean Tony 's been at the club a long time he 's expressed a wish to go erm his style and his age is probably just right to go on the continent , he 's twenty six years of age and er I would guess that his particular style wou possibly would be better suited to continental play than it is in England .
11 Normally amongst these is included any matter where the complainant has or had a right of appeal or right to go to the courts but has not used it .
12 The ‘ controversies of the day ’ certainly included the dispute over clause 43 of the Administration of Justice Bill in 1985 , by which the Government proposed to end the citizen 's right to go to the Court of Appeal when a lower court refused to give leave to apply for judicial review of the decision of a Minister or other public authority .
13 Although GPs can arrange for the test to be done , it is almost always preferable to go to a STD clinic .
14 While the focus of our endeavour must necessarily be the degree to which the project has achieved its own stated objectives , the evaluators have felt free to go beyond the limits which those objectives described .
15 Any man is free to go to the wire .
16 Then he walked over and told me that a Corporal from the Foreign Legion recruiting office at Lille would come to pick me up in two hours ; until then I was free to go for a walk and get something to eat .
17 ‘ He said he was going to trained to go on a crash team .
18 It seemed sensible to go to the flat and telephone from there .
19 Following the GCHQ case , the courts have appeared willing to go beyond the rules of natural justice when implying procedural impropriety .
20 Hence representing revenues from community X by R(X) we can say : The consequence is that the group of three communities would not be willing to go for the scheme involving supply to all three , since they would not be able to come up with an agreed method of sharing the £650 .
21 Do n't be afraid to go to the police .
22 Surely it 's true that everyone who changes his or her life because of crime — from those afraid to go out at night to those afraid to go into the parks they pay for — surely these people have been denied a basic civil right .
23 I was afraid to go into the house after what had happened in the village , so I hid in the hut .
24 Nevertheless the official surveyors who came to map the Trepke boundaries remained too afraid to go into the fields of the estate .
25 She was not afraid to go before a judge , ’ he said .
26 Still it may be unfashionable to go for the majority anyway .
27 But it it 's inconvenient to go to the library , write down lots of addresses and then come away again .
28 As the shadow Chancellor said last week , ’ I ’ — that is , the shadow Chancellor — ’ am prepared to go on the basis of accepting the PSBR which emerges from the Budget . ’
29 Several major galleries now claim that they have ceased trading with Saatchi - ‘ I would n't sell him a napkin , ’ said one prominent figure in the New York art world — but since no one is prepared to go on the record with such an assertion , or to have their name directly linked to a quote , it is hard to avoid the conclusion that dealers and artists are hedging their bets .
30 His language was often alarming , not least to America 's allies : he spoke of meeting Soviet aggressive with " massive retaliation " ( that is , nuclear weapons ) , and the need , in diplomacy , to have the nerve for " brinkmanship " ( being prepared to go to the brink of nuclear war ) .
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