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

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1 His card message system gave him the freedom to go out alone and hail a taxi , showing the driver the appropriate card for the place he wanted to visit .
2 He did n't dare attempt to go back again until the coast was clear , so he hid himself until everyone was gone .
3 one piece round here and then the other piece goes around there and it 's the only thing is
4 Nazi thugs burn down Sony 's Berlin premises : Chancellor Kohl wins big cheers when he says the perpetrators are just high-spirited hooligans , reminds listeners that German-Japanese friendship goes back more than 50 years .
5 It 'll cost you about three hundred pound to go up there and back .
6 ‘ This is intrusive , see , there 's the fault going up there and squirts of lava coming down . ’
7 The Abyssinians could claim an uninterrupted succession going back more than two thousand years ; in Africa , only Egypt had a more ancient civilization .
8 Mr John Greenway 's solid work in the constituency was rewarded with a 17,439 majority after his vote went up more than 4,000 to 39,888 .
9 A police investigation at a school for disturbed children has been stepped up after claims of abuse going back more than twenty years .
10 The sun went in again and I walked on .
11 Similarly , we can criticise wilko for being negative — but we do nt know if he s told the team to go out there and score at all costs , but the team just has nt responded .
12 1980–83 — disco goes back underground and a new electronic sound emerges .
13 Both of those strands are very much part of volunteering , they 're very much linked with the concept of the active citizen , and there are still lots of voluntary organisations that form and which continue , and which are existing today , which stem entirely from people 's desire to go out there and do something , in their own way .
14 The arrival of this ‘ adventitious ’ rural population goes back further than is often assumed , and is by no means a purely post-war phenomenon .
15 There 's not the point going out there and fucking taking God knows how many pictures
16 ‘ Where I come from there is always a war going on somewhere or other .
17 But there 's a business going on there that somebody should put a spoke into , before something happens and a life is destroyed . ’
18 He was an artist and his only dream was one day to go back home and paint .
19 House and land prices tend on the whole to go up rather than down .
20 I think that there ought to be a proper company wide inst or certainly U K wide instruction going out so that everybody 's aware of the changes
21 more cunning stuff going on here as well .
22 My friend went on ahead and told Mum what had happened and Dad , after leaving work , came out to meet me .
23 The latest is he 's improving the prisons , and ’ — her head went back now and she laughed — ‘ he 's wanting a law brought in for heavy sentences for incest .
24 His head went down again and he cried and cried and cried .
25 That ‘ political event of the decade ’ looked good on television , especially when the fireworks finale went off just as John Cole , the BBC 's political editor , went out live on the Nine O'Clock News , but it was a strangely soulless event to the 10,000 participants .
26 The bad feeling goes back further than that — because the England striker was himself red-carded after a bust-up involving Walsh at Leicester two seasons ago .
27 The rate went back up as expected , but the British crew could make no impression , trailing home in fifth as the United States took the gold .
28 Mine go back further than most humans ' . ’
29 Work on the cut beyond the flight went on vigorously and by October 1811 four of the five miles between Foxton and the north end of the Husbands Bosworth Tunnel had been completed .
30 ‘ The figures mean that someone has been defrauding the company and it was n't Craig Grenfell because if you look at the dates you 'll see that the fiddling went on even when Craig was in prison . ’
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