Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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31 As might be expected from data reported earlier , positive attitudes as measured by all five factors were significantly associated with willingness to go on to a second round of review and reporting .
32 So you actually had to go on to a smaller boat ?
33 My father wanted me to go on to a Public School and I received special lessons in Latin Verse and in Greek ..
34 If you start to go on to the other p , side of the page , start again .
35 He decided to go on to the second and third caves , determined to find what he was looking for .
36 I had to go on to the usual horror .
37 This entirely new production , due to go on to the Royal National Theatre in London , remains true to the essence of Lorca 's play , and as vibrant as the heat and colours of ‘ the land of sun and shadow ’ .
38 Then continue walking at this pace until you feel ready to go on to the 30 day walk back to fitness programme later in this chapter .
39 When you are ready to go on to the next potency , the whole process is repeated with a single poppy seed granule of the desired strength .
40 We must insist on a system of tests that will be for the benefit of the pupils ; that will test what each one can do in practical work and in theoretical understanding ; and will serve as a motive for each to go on to the next stage .
41 If he does this then a sociological perspective has been brought to bear on the first idea and the researcher is ready to go on to the next step , which will be one of limiting his ideas to a feasible scheme of work .
42 But evolution ploughed on remorselessly , enabling only the most adaptable to go on to the next stage .
43 Erm , right , what I want to do this week , is to go on to the next er , work of Freud 's , that follows after erm , group psychology , or rather to the next two , because I 'm gon na back these two books together for , hi there , , erm gon na back these two books together , because as we 'll see , they , they really deal with the same subject .
44 It concerns me , in fact I was , I 've had a theory for a couple of years now , that what the Tories wish us all to do is to go on to the American system of medical insurance .
45 Kohl has decided to go on with a fast-breeder reactor in Kalkar on the Rhine , although development costs have quadrupled to 6–5 billion DM .
46 There is slightly more to go on with the latter however , and one seems justified in presuming the work of at least two men .
47 To go on with the utter silence or to break the silence , pretending nothing had happened .
48 It is possible to go on with the same therapist to deal with the problems which caused you to need the regression experience in the first place .
49 With bottle feeding you have some choices after six months ; to go on with the original formula , use a follow-on formula or start boiled cow 's milk .
50 ‘ It all seemed to go on for a long time , but it must have been just a few seconds . ’
51 It seemed to go on for a long time .
52 To go on for a long time doing better and better exhibitions .
53 Colleagues , it 's approximately four twenty five , what I propose to do is to go on for a short period and to take in the resolutions on the , on your erm Maastricht erm and then we 'll have a look at the time , but I think we should be able to get those in within a , a relatively short period of time .
54 It is usually noticeable that when a masochist has for years felt hard done by , often over-controlled by their partner , and then for some reason the tables are turned , he or she metes out punishment as if this has to go on for the same length of time that the masochist 's suffering was endured .
55 Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade .
56 Lights began to go on in the dark houses , and I relished my melancholy to the last drop .
57 So I started to write a variation on the first bar and told her to go on in the same way and to keep to the idea .
58 Ordinarily , learning allows us to go on in the same way , to repeat what has been learned , whether it is a matter of fact ( that London is the capital of England ) or an action ( driving a car in familiar circumstances ) .
59 A concrete breakwater stretches away to sink slowly in the dark distance .
60 The big cat started to swing on to the other tack but a swell caught her bow , slamming her back .
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