Example sentences of "[vb base] go [adv] of [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The ultimate in this line is the standing order , usually employed for annuals , which tend to go out of print very quickly once advance subscriptions are satisfied .
2 and if that inefficiency was causing the problem it 's not the result of the ownership er , there are inefficient private companies it 's just that inefficient private companies tend to go out of business , whereas inefficient public ones can be maintained with subsidization .
3 While their richer brothers rake in subsidies , the poorer farmers continue to go out of business . ’
4 If Barnet do go out of business it could spell joy for Walsall and Halifax .
5 Just as you keep much-lived garments in your closet slip into long after they 've gone out of style , bottles of your favourite fragrance still have a place in your library of perfumes , too .
6 They 've gone out of business anyway now .
7 Traders who 've gone out of business in a showpiece shopping complex are suing the developers for damages .
8 Cos we had Linekars , course they 've gone out of business , but when he came , when the boss came to this one he reckoned one of these was a bit out did n't he ?
9 Not all problems have gone away of course : yesterday 's £6.4 billion public sector borrowing requirement is not much higher than expectations , but it is almost as large as the deficit for the previous 11 months and — with this year 's deficit forecast to be double last year 's — shows why the Bank of England so eagerly sold £2 billion or more of gilts on election night and why it needs a regular stream of massive sales .
10 Two reasons for extending clusters have gone out of vogue : the need to get bigger , and risk diversification .
11 Add that to the fact that three Premier League clubs have gone out of Europe this week and you get an idea about the state of English football .
12 Of course , even within the stated parameters , comprehensiveness is an impossible goal , because some publications escape the net , or are listed so late that they have gone out of print or are out-of-date by the time they appear .
13 For some strange reason bells have gone out of fashion with the young , but it only needs some careful marketing to bring them back in again ( something computer-controlled , with buttons ? ) .
14 It used to be common for agreements for the supply of crude oil to do the same , but these have gone out of fashion in recent years with the volatility of oil prices : they may reappear if the oil price settles down .
15 Hundreds have gone out of business , ’ Andy Oatley , the association 's chairman , said .
16 Read every line carefully — they will be teeming with exclusions , and if the firms have gone out of business or the guarantees are non-transferable , they are useless .
17 Many of those farmers have gone out of business .
18 Companies responsible for its prospects have gone out of business seven times , discovering that while they could make money on the big promotions , the building and park were too expensive to run on a tickover basis ( nowadays the park alone costs £650,000 a year to maintain ) , and in an earlier era of six-day working weeks , the public had not much leisure time to spend there anyway .
19 ‘ Since 1987 , 270 Darlington companies have gone out of business and it has been overwhelmingly small companies .
20 Wholesalers of course have suffered during the post-war period , and many have gone out of business because their traditional outlet ( the independent ) has also suffered .
21 In Britain some 4,000 stations have gone out of use since the 1960s , and many of them have vanished altogether — swept away with a callous disregard for our architectural heritage that takes the breath away .
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