Example sentences of "go [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Mr. Walker : I do not blame the Hon. Gentleman for making such a speech just before a by-election , but I am glad to tell him that tomorrow I shall go through every detail of the valleys programme and I look forward to the Labour party 's publishing beside each item what the Labour Government achieved in their last five years .
2 ( Indeed , if N = M - 1 , the curve will go through every point and will be over-fitted . )
3 It 's safe to say that every child in every culture will go through a period of saying that the pencil which has been moved up is now longer or bigger or big now .
4 It is my experience that many students of English Literature with good A-level results dislike poetry , or at least feel baffled by it , and can go through a three-year degree course without this attitude being radically changed .
5 It 's a nice idea that in business or banking you can go through a period of ‘ consolidation ’ , but it seldom works out that way .
6 To win approval , drugs must first go through a series of animal and clinical tests which are reviewed by government drug-approval agencies .
7 Another , compiled in June , stated that no one believed any longer in an early end to the war in Russia , and that soldiers on leave had said they would not go through a second winter there .
8 To change from clockwise to anticlockwise it must go through a third dimension to become a mirror image .
9 We might turn away from our own particular church — we might go through a period of not knowing what we believe in — we might change from being a Catholic to a Buddhist or from a Jehovah 's Witness to an Anglican ; but , no matter how many times we reject religion , we know it will never reject us .
10 All I want to do is go through a few aspects of your statement , to make sure I 've got them right . ’
11 And yet , if we are asked to multiply by five , we will usually go through a fairly laborious process .
12 There are occasions , usually occurring when the weather conditions are near perfect for bream fishing , when you will go through a period of having bite after bite , all looking perfectly hittable in the classic bream style — slow and determined — and when you will become extremely frustrated because you miss every one .
13 But before they can be used they must go through a market process through the shops .
14 Most people who have experienced the loss of a parent or a partner have suffered bereavement , and must inevitably go through a mourning process .
15 He argues that , even in the absence of natural selection or genetic drift , a population can go through a process of evolutionary change .
16 here at last is a narrow twin pushchair that will go through a single doorway .
17 And we would go through a song and everybody would keep trying different things .
18 Of 1992 , which saw the couple split as well as her topless pictures with friend Johnny Bryan , Fergie said : ‘ I ca n't go through a year like this ever again .
19 This has led scientists to speculate that all galaxies might go through a quasar phase , then a less active phase , and finally settle into the stability typical of our own and many local galaxies .
20 Normally the trainer will go through a reproduced interview and discuss the good and bad points which are usually clearly evident .
21 If the SSC were to be cancelled , American particle physics would go through a crisis — but CERN would help it pull through .
22 You ca n't even go through a whole book being called Nigel .
23 Add to that the cost or annual holidays and season tickets , and you can see that your expenditure will go through a number of peaks and troughs .
24 I recall vividly one member of the aristocracy who was in such a state about being interviewed on TV that he insisted that I help him go through a half bottle of whisky first .
25 It will then go through a container now that container , ultimately , will contain this is why it 's called a container !
26 Now either way , obviously it 's a head injury and must be dealt with , but we 're going to do an overall thing here by saying right , now the next one on the list is concussion now concussion is shaking of the brain inside the skull now there 's noth no room for anything but the brain inside that skull , so if that 's shaken the brain hits against the sides of the bra of the er bone , and bruises so what actually happens here is the brain gets shaken and the nerve cells get damaged now you 've all seen this con and it 's so easily done concussion , you can go through a whole list of things which can cause concussion , road traffic accident , sport , construction working erm anything that erm , heading ball , football that 's another one that erm you get quite a bit of concussion and of course boxing
27 Carbon dioxide is the most soluble of the gases because as it dissolves it does n't just go through a physical solution it goes through a chemical conversion such that carbon dioxide dissolving in water forms carbonic acid which , in water will dissociate into a hydrogen iron and a hydrogen bicarbonate iron which can further dissociate this is why I 've got a nice wide blackboard and you 've only got a piece of A four paper so you end up with a carbonate iron two hydrogen ions This system is a dynamic equilibrium .
28 We shall go through a number of examples later .
29 " 'It is n't everyone who can go through a keyhole , after all . "
30 We should go through a process o of this group of slotting , in accordance with the rules , and get that
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