Example sentences of "[noun] to go [adv prt] [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 They are likely to be allowed less freedom to go out on the streets and stay out late .
2 Times to go down to the pits and the sun came out .
3 Well erm David said that he did n't think the strike would have gone on or they would n't have the heart to go on without the women ?
4 Calling for the " strengthening of ties between the party and the masses " , it made seven demands : ( i ) adherence to the mass line ( i.e. policy making and implementation in line with the interests of the people ) ; ( ii ) officials to go down among the masses ; ( iii ) the strengthening of socialist democracy and the legal system ; ( iv ) fighting official corruption ; ( v ) supervision , internal and from outside ; ( vi ) the need for exemplary behaviour from party members ; and ( vii ) raising political ( Marxist ) awareness .
5 For them , he said , there was a need to go back to the basics of spelling , grammar , punctuation and arithmetic .
6 Put it in the pile of things to go back in the cupboards . ’
7 I share the view of the hon. Member for West Bromwich , East that it does not make sense to go back to the days of the red flag , but we must find a compromise between the passenger 's interest , which is the interest of the railways , and the pedestrian 's interest .
8 Did you yourself take part in the operation to go in with the guns ?
9 The time had now come for Eric to go up into the Apennines on behalf of the Commission to pay and honour all those Italians , for the most part peasants , who had helped and in many cases saved the lives of escaping prisoners-of-war .
10 Rather than launch into these discussions with yet another set of theories , the aim of teaching in the New Testament department is to help students to go back to the verses and passages themselves for new insights and new understanding .
11 Edberg is the sixth seed to go out of the men 's championship after a record five seeds were beaten in the first round .
12 He had braved the bitter weather to go down to the bookshops on the Charing Cross Road not just for the chance to get some books — he could have bought them any time — but principally to meet Joseph Hyde and hear the latest news from Dublin .
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