Example sentences of "to go to the " in BNC.

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1 The reader 's only remedy is to go to the exhibition .
2 But he does all this at the cost of suspending a due sense of the tendency there has also been for poets to see further than their noses , and to speak out , and to go to the wall for it .
3 It would be a tragic loss to theatre if such an important organisation were to go to the wall .
4 Mercutio is in high spirits , teasing Romeo about his love as they prepare to go to the Capulet masked ball .
5 ‘ Do n't you want to go to the wedding ? ’
6 This usually takes the form of a burning pain when you pass water and the feeling you want to go to the toilet more often than usual .
7 Exit offended alter-ego with money enough to go to the pictures .
8 ‘ I thought you would have to go to the mill ? ’
9 It was taking a risk , when she thought about it , to go to the seaside in September .
10 In this way the child learnt that it was in his own interest for the experimenter to go to the empty box .
11 The next stage is to go to the manufacturers of the machines you thinking of installing and get the plan dimensions of their products .
12 travel to arrange the funeral , or to go to the funeral ( one return journey only )
13 Five pitches to go to the break at the end of the difficulties , four hours of daylight left .
14 But then when she realised this , she offered to go to the east summit with me .
15 All but about 300 of the East Germans had flatly refused an offer of guaranteed permission to go to the West providing they returned to East Germany first .
16 THE SOVIET UNION played a key role in the agreement under which thousands of East Germans who had taken refuge in the West German embassies in Prague and Warsaw were allowed to go to the West on Sunday , government officials said yesterday .
17 And remember to go to the video boutique if you have n't seen the videos recently .
18 ‘ He only wanted to go to the out-patients .
19 In a politically bold move whose timing was widely interpreted as a favour to Margaret Thatcher with a week to go to the Commonwealth summit in Kuala Lumpur , Mr de Klerk said that the prisoners would be released as soon as prison formalities were dealt with .
20 HONG KONG — Xu Jiatun , China 's senior official in Hong Kong , was summoned to Peking for talks on the dispute between China and Hong Kong over the Chinese swimmer Yang Yang , who was allowed by Hong Kong to go to the US last week , writes Kevin Hamlin .
21 We end , after a protracted flashback , with Casaubon unable to go to the police because nobody would believe his story .
22 East Germany had agreed to give them papers allowing them to go to the country of their choice , and they were expected to leave Poland ‘ in the very near future ’ .
23 Once the sum raised passes the £25,000 mark , royalties will revert to the Orchestra and Nimbus Records , the producers , while Legal & General 's will continue to go to the National Aids Trust .
24 If you suspect , for example , that your neighbour intends to build on your land , or if your windows are going to be blocked so that no light can get through , or if an unreasonable nuisance is going to be caused , then your last hope may be to go to the courts and ask for an injunction .
25 ‘ If I 'd done it then , perhaps I would n't have been fit to go to the Olympics and worlds , and I 'd hate to be sitting here now thinking I could have won .
26 For the proper ‘ return ’ it seemed essential to go to the earliest known sources .
27 On one occasion , to kill time before a suitably uplifting film , we met at Waterloo station and decided to go to the cinema within the station precinct which showed a continuous programme of cartoons for the convenience of passengers with time on their hands .
28 Malcolm was about to go to the States .
29 The first bloke was late so , instead of waiting , we decided to go to the pub .
30 They tend to conclude their account with the formation of the National Government , giving ensuing events — in particular , the decision of the National Government to go to the country as a National Government — fairly perfunctory treatment ; and this despite the fact that , as Ball rightly claims , ‘ The radical restructuring of British politics after 1931 lies not in the events of 13–28 August , but in the changing attitudes within the National Government during September and October 1931 . '
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