Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] go [prep] a " in BNC.
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1 | My kids want to go for a visit and my daughter wants a picture of our home … |
2 | Erm , we called a lodge meeting before the annual leave , annual shutdown , and in that lodge meeting all three quarries agreed to go on a work to rule as from the resumption of work , which is second week of August . |
3 | ‘ When clients have gone to a firm and believe that they have been treated badly , they tend to complain against the firm , not the engagement partner , and are surprised when the Institute tells them that they can not do so , ’ said Elwyn Eilledge , head of the working party . |
4 | According to Ms Leith , the designers have gone for a ‘ serious and conventional restaurant ’ look ‘ which will not frighten members with too much yuppie jazzdom ’ , but which is also fun — ‘ witty , modern and stylish enough to encourage them to come ’ . |
5 | As soon as the cold fingers let go for a moment , I pulled my hand quickly back , put a pile of books in front of the broken window , and tried not to listen to the desperate cries outside . |
6 | In a very short space of time — just a few decades — the industrial moths had gone through a small but distinct evolutionary step . |
7 | From one in Khorramshahr , 800 refugees have gone to a better , cooler site near Dezful , 200 km ( 120 miles ) north . |
8 | During Ellis 's tenure at Kurunagala cattle stealing went into a sharp decline , but as soon as he left the district it revived . |
9 | Our own work found that one in three managers appeared to go through a sense of crisis in their late thirties . |
10 | Bunny , Martin and the other two girls decided to go for a meal in a Swedish restaurant Bunny said he knew in Lisson Grove , the Dead Zone between the Edgware Road and Lord 's Cricket Ground . |
11 | So that 's what the major players think goes into a network user 's PC . |
12 | This is the first time 3 forces have gone into a joint exercise from the outset and I think we 'll see that example spread right across the country to the extent where eventually the whole country will be given police air support . |
13 | Tomatoes need to go in a bag or else they 'll roll about all the over the place see if you can spot , the small-ish ones , but not like that , see cos that 's got a mark on it , we do n't want that one . |
14 | Actually her friends have gone through a lot . |
15 | The vestal virgins had gone for a tea break and I sat down thankfully in the cool of the ruins and closed my eyes . |
16 | Perhaps when their children have to go to a run-down , underfunded , understaffed State school they will understand why most of the country is up in arms about the state of the education system . |
17 | All proposals had to go through a protective sieve , an inner filtration to correspond to the standard he sets for his work . |
18 | All proposals had to go through a protective sieve , an inner filtration to correspond to the standard he sets for his work . |
19 | Tony and I embarked on a consideration of Child Benefit but before many minutes had gone by a note was sent in informing us that Peter Carrington had resigned . |
20 | Last week , adults waiting to go to a school for the adult mentally handicapped were taken there three hundred and fifty and only ten teachers were allowed into the school . |
21 | The annual report of the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration criticised the system whereby claimants had to go through a cumbersome late appeals procedure to obtain the full arrears benefit to which they were rightfully entitled where those exceeded the statutory 12-month limit . |
22 | " Do n't worry , there are other worlds in which the quantum fluctuations have gone along a different path which will prevent the crash . |
23 | ‘ He had been nursed superbly and that needs to be said because the nurses have gone through a difficult time for obvious reasons and I would like to assure them , in public , that what they have done was quite superlative . ’ |
24 | These cultures have gone through a major change such that the use of credit is now an accepted feature in managing personal expenditure patterns . |
25 | The pressure of pain on his temples let go for a minute to rearrange itself further back . |
26 | The helpers had gone for a siesta , but Lopez still worked , carving the branches into intricate shapes , with dozens of little crannies where pots of flowers could be sited . |
27 | Twenty teams from the Royal Bank , the Bank of Scotland and the Clydesdale took part , the runners-up prize going to a team from of Scotland . |