Example sentences of "[noun] go [adv] [prep] [art] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Do their heads go right to the top of their helmets ? ’ |
2 | I see in today 's papers that Batty will be back in the team for tomorrow , does this mean that Wilko will drop Fairclough or Newsome or will he let Rocky go back to the bench and play essentially a back 6 ? |
3 | He 's letting all sorts go through at the moment . |
4 | I saw Falconer go up to the top of the tower . |
5 | Think of letting your weight go evenly through the soles of your feet ( for balance ) . |
6 | lets hope scum go down for the geordies tomorrow ( match of the day in norway ) ! ( hmm — my futba-english justs keeps improving does n't it ; - ] ) |
7 | ‘ I saw Mr Hyde go in by the laboratory door in the street at the back of the house , ’ said the lawyer . |
8 | ‘ Do your feet go right to the end of those ? ’ |
9 | . Daryl was utterly taken about , what in the wide world did Sally mean , she watched the girl go out of the room and sat down on the form completely bewildered . |
10 | ‘ If you 'd really wanted to hurt me , you 'd have let Ash go ahead with the publicity , would have backed him up , and I would n't have been able to deny it because it was all based on the truth , but a twisted truth ! |
11 | But what about this : in 1853 , at Trouville , he watched the sun go down over the sea , and declared that it resembled a large disc of redcurrant jam . |
12 | When I lived in southern France I used to sit out on the porch and watch the sun go down across the valley . |
13 | Stopping on the lonely road , I watched the sun go down in the trees behind Thornfield , and then in the silence I heard a horse approaching . |
14 | Would the curtain go up on the world 's greatest surfing spectacle before I had to leave — or would it all go ahead without me ? |
15 | Did Tolkien go on from the exploitation of occasional scenes to the manipulation of plot , the creation of recognisably symbolic characters , the thing the TLS reviewer asked for so plaintively , ‘ a clear message for the modern world ’ ? |
16 | At the time I was mucking out the byre stalls , and piling the manure on top of my big heap when I saw the lights go on in the house . |
17 | And she sang a few bars into the mouthpiece , swaying a little , watching the lights go off in the theatre . |
18 | Then she saw Sophia go over to the statue of the Virgin Mary . |
19 | The former Kent and England spinner Derek Underwood , director of cricket at Club Surfaces , had this to say : ‘ Of course I enjoy seeing our pitches go in at the Etons and Tonbridges , but it is at grass-roots level within the state-schools sector that the wealth of untapped talent must not be lost to the game . ’ |
20 | ‘ I could ask him and Tim and you , and make my mum go out for the evening . ’ |
21 | North Road and St Bede 's will go forward to the finals . |
22 | One could either leave the sliding door open and see the world go by down the corridor , or close oneself into a private cocoon ; and at night , one 's bed descended from the ceiling and on to the seat of the facilities which effectively put them out of use . |
23 | Those for whom relaxation means minimum effort will find that watching the world go by from a deck chair on the Prom is a riveting experience . |
24 | Inset Watching the world go by from the observation or promenade deck of an Empire Flying-boat , 1930s . |
25 | Erm and er that it 's maybe very important at a time like this when children are potentially going and and knocking on stranger 's doors to be particularly careful so what we 've done is is is put together a simple guide for parents and carers erm which suggests that er they should n't just let their children go off for the evening . |
26 | ( i.e. would miss seeing children go by on the way to and from school ) . |
27 | For some reason he picked up on that word and let her cool statement go by for the moment . |
28 | For myself , I would let the others go on to the caves and pass the time instead above ground in the large riverside village of Saint-Pé ( the Gascon form of Pierre ) -de-Bigorre , which has a nicely arcaded square and a few pleasing remains of its old abbey church , once the grandest religious building in the Pyrenees but now part in effect of the dull parish church that later replaced it , after it had been fired by Protestant arsonists in the Wars of Religion . |
29 | that you would have boys go out with no forewarning , tripping over stumbling blocks here , there and everywhere and girls who are not even allowed to benefit from others ' experience , let alone , have their own . |
30 | Well I of course re I was only seven years old , so really I only , I only saw the , the hearse go by with the mourners . |