Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] go to the " in BNC.

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1 or just go to the outpatients in general , and the casualty
2 If you wanted to take them off or even go to the lavatory , you had to undo a complicated buttoned flap at the front .
3 Many of the new firms that started were under-capitalised and so went to the wall , but the net number has increased by many hundreds of thousands since 1979 .
4 Indeed I had also hoped that we might pick up some extra coach passengers , who , strange as it might seem , would prefer to forgo the train ride altogether and just go to the eisteddfod .
5 Colds may settle in the nose and usually go to the chest with much whistling , wheezing and dyspnoea , worse ( < ) exertion .
6 If this method is barred because the headmaster does not agree that the child might have a learning difficulty called dyslexia , then the parents will have to go outside the school system and possibly go to the Dyslexia Institute at Staines , where a full assessment is carried out , with a report , which is sent to the parents .
7 She took part in a number of land occupations and later went to the capital to work for FECCAS there .
8 ‘ I tried to get help , and even went to the police , telling them he was taking and selling heroin .
9 The Epitome or Gaius ' Institutes still distinguishes between legacies and trusts , and even goes to the trouble of explaining what the difference is .
10 The woman ran to a friend in college and immediately went to the Police for help … she 's now too frightened to leave college at night .
11 Later on we would walk round town and maybe go to the cinema .
12 The best example of that type of person is the liberal who professes to be anti-war and anti-violence and then goes to the boxing matches or watches the football game and screams his head off .
13 She stops at the two cars and then goes to the one with the woman from Ty Fach because the girl is in the other one .
14 And then goes to the library to get the book she wants
15 Because in the four days Doyle and me were following Latowa , he and Charlie only met twice — once for about thirty seconds , probably just to say hello , and then to go to the Cambridge Hotel . ’
16 They waited several minutes and then went to the back of the building where the family 's living quarters were .
17 Annie rang the top bell and then went to the third floor , Susan 's flat .
18 She straightened up , wiping her forehead with the bottom of her apron , and then went to the dresser to open the drawer .
19 Her son had been detained on his way to Dunvegan , so they lunched in a stately dining-room , and then went to the drawing-room to meet the family .
20 From this he moved on to command the airship station at Wormwood Scrubs , and then went to the Admiralty to help in airship design and allocation .
21 I had a sandwich in a crowded City pub , and then went to the bank to collect Miss Macdonald 's letter .
22 Greg got up , blundered round the tiny bedroom , and then went to the bathroom and showered noisily , as if he were trying to knock sense into his head .
23 erm There they might have remained erm but erm a sensational discovery took place , which was during the Second World War , when , in the Blitz , a bomb actually hit the , the , the place of worship for the Muddletonians , where they were still worshipping though in very small number , and the man whom we have called the last Muddletonian , who was a farmer in Matfield in Kent , went out with his lorry — you remember petrol was rationed during the war , but he was allowed as a farmer — he took his fruit to Covent Garden , and then went to the smoking ruins of the Muddletonian worship , and filled his apple boxes with papers , and they remained there until the nineteen seventies .
24 The best preliminary plan may be for the reader to open the book upright at ( the illustration ) and then go to the other side of the room , to be imposed on from a distance : it is the nearest the book can offer to the proper first encounter with the figure .
25 Hailsham , in an article in the Daily Express , of 3 September , called for an election , to be fought on party lines , with the aim of securing a Conservative majority for protection , The government , Hailsham said , should hurry up to complete the purpose for which it was formed , namely the balancing of the budget , and then go to the country on party lines .
26 I could just walk around till morning and then go to the Committee office first thing — ’
27 His 180 paintings , drawings , collages , sculptures , ceramics , printing blocks and plates by the artist are on show at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona until 30 January and then go to the Ludwig Museum in Cologne ( 27 February-16 May ) before joining the ‘ Ludwigslust ’ celebrations of all aspects of the Ludwig collection on the occasion of the reopening of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg ( 18 June-10 October ) .
28 You can walk all round and have a look at the things and then go to the end and pay .
29 We graciously decline , and instead go to the cinema .
30 Merger with the Southampton based British Seafarers was not merely a convenience , but a necessity , and Wilson , writing in his journal The Seaman exulted that " Shinwell 's patched up old derelict has run bow against the rock of the Sailors ' and Firemen 's Union and ignominiously gone to the bottom " Later he gave his own version of how Shinwell had flattered the susceptible French into leaving to him the day-today business of the Glasgow branch and poisoned the minds of the members against him .
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