Example sentences of "[noun pl] go [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 And indeed the anthropomorphism of the sociobiologists goes much further than that since they regularly employ a language which derives directly from the ideology of twentieth-century capitalism : investment , costs , benefits are central elements in their vocabulary .
2 We saw on Monday , factory gate prices going up less than people expected , today , prices in the shops going up less than people expected .
3 Police blamed the crash on drivers going too fast and too close in freezing fog .
4 No , it was n't this that got on his nerves , but the monotony of his surrounding , the long , long road through the camp , the huts going off here and there , the airfield dotted with little planes , looking like toys , the new hall that was used for entertainments , pictures and the church services , standing out like a sore thumb .
5 And the winners go out there and get what they want .
6 I do appreciate the discount since CPRW is a charity and we try to make our funds go as far as possible .
7 Some schools go as far as appointing a press officer from amongst the staff or the governors .
8 And they would have barriers going out so that they could so that the gentry could go out to stand on that ladies and men .
9 And it 's only if there is no spouse that matters go rather more as might expect , namely firstly always the children or the issue if they are n't any of those to your parents brothers an sis er issue of parents therefore brothers sisters nephews and nieces .
10 Is my right hon. Friend aware that many bed-and-breakfast families are living below the level of subsistence and that parents go without so that children can eat ?
11 Most visitors go no further although the path continues quite easily up-river .
12 Some amateur associations went as far as legal prosecution to prevent any payment or pro fit being derived from the activities they controlled .
13 The police are now also checking records of indecent assaults in Oxford , to see if the pattern of attacks goes back further than last year .
14 And all this has happened with costs going down rather than up .
15 well actually me jars going right there and I ca n't remember , whether I did get that from Co-Op , I think I did Co-Op , but they were in dozens , and I think Presto had some
16 ribbed bands going up there and there .
17 Critics , however , say that the boats go no faster than those they are trying to catch .
18 In the early 1960s a number of economists went so far as to argue that growth had to be export-led [ Kaldor , 1971 ] .
19 When we take breaks — when I 'm at home or on vacation — my chops go down drastically because I 'm enjoying my free time and doing things I do n't usually have time to do .
20 The propagandists go so far as to assume , even to assert , that it would not result in any splitting of the party vote : in other words that votes transferred from Dandy or Deadman or Doughty would go to another of these three running-mates and not elsewhere .
21 But his role in their problems goes back further than that .
22 In my youth ( many years ago ) I worked as a redcoat at Butlin 's in Bognor Regis and used to be House Captain of York where we trained teams of holidaymakers to go as fast as possible .
23 He 'll want things to go on just as before , while he helps himself to a share of the takings .
24 And there 's things going on now that frighten me . ’
25 There are tribal things going on there that you would n't know about unless you lived there . ’
26 Sometimes she thought that things went much better when Liza happened to be out of the room and she was alone with John .
27 According to some journalists whose memories go back further than 1986 , there is less ‘ caballing ’ in today 's newspaper office , and working conditions militate a sense of common interest , common identity and shared concerns among staff .
28 Planning powers go considerably further than simply enabling local authorities to preserve trees .
29 Some interpretations of modern astrophysics go so far as to suggest that a conscious observer is necessary for the physical universe to exist at all — the observed needs an observer .
30 Muslins and calicoes became the fashionable fabrics , and under the determined leadership of Sir Josiah Child profits went up sharply if not always regularly in the 1670s and 1680s , so that the price of shares rose ninefold between 1660 and 1685 .
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