Example sentences of "[noun] goes [adv prt] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The story goes back to the major earthquake , magnitude 7 on the Richter scale , which rocked Greece in February 1981 .
2 In another account of youth work , Hubert Secretan rehearsed the same complaint : ‘ Every boy 's sympathy goes out to the lithe and resourceful crook …
3 The origin of the synagogue goes back to the Babylonian period .
4 because I just think it would , it 's so important to get that bit , that bit goes along with the all the application bit , if we tie those two up together
5 The work of solicitors goes back to the 15th century and as time has gone on they have become increasingly influential .
6 But the tax on company cars goes up by a third .
7 My mind goes back to the original fifteen-year Hospital Plan , published in January 1962 .
8 The roof goes on in a few tumultuous hours .
9 Meanwhile the search goes on for a scientific breakthrough .
10 The history of the perehera goes back to the second century AD , when King Gajabuha won a great victory against his foes in southern India , the Tamils , chasing them back across the narrow strait into their homeland .
11 But then there are other gardening programmes which very much perform that kind of mediating role you 're talking about , where one of the presenters goes along to a real person with an actual garden and asks the gardener how he or she sets about creating this garden and quite a number of those presenters are women .
12 THE flag goes up on the 1993 Eastern Centre Motorcycle Grass Track racing season on Sunday at Brazils Farm , Woodham Ferrers , near Chelmsford .
13 ( Koch 1985a , p. 149 ) Koch and others have stressed that because this conception of the gaze goes back to the Freudian idea of an originary bisexuality it therefore affords a better explanation of women 's actual viewing behaviour , e.g. their multiple identifications with either gender .
14 The work of cataloguing goes back to the early years of Italian unification in the late nineteenth century when the first photographs were taken of archaeological sites and of celebrated pictures and monuments .
15 The history of this Fellowship in Orkney goes back to the early 1980s …
16 Later on in the profession itself the process goes on at a different level .
17 I mean it is a possibility , and if he 's going to be awkward perhaps we 'll have to just make sure that we do that , which is presumably fairly easy , if the post goes out from the same office .
18 So if your mains goes off through an electrical storm or something
19 In all cases consent goes up to a certain point only .
20 The use of inspectors as a form of central supervision goes back to the Poor Law reform of 1834 .
21 This ice cream boasts American parentage , though its ancestry goes back to the exotic sherbets which were made in the Arab kingdoms of Granada and Cordoba in Spain .
22 The BLR&DD 's involvement with user education goes back to the early 1970s when it was called the Office for Scientific and Technical Information ( OSTI ) but it was the BLR&DD 's establishment of the Review Committee of Education for Information Use in 1974 that marked its presence in the field .
23 The reputation of Vertus 's richly perfumed still red wines goes back to the fourteenth century ; in the seventeenth century these wines were favoured by William of Orange .
24 ‘ The de Sciorto name and title goes back to the sixteenth century .
25 His inspiration goes back to the early idea of Charles Frank , plus the fact that muon catalysed fusion was observed in 1956 by accident and the interest has grown in fits and starts ever since .
26 In the clinical literature , the word ‘ natural ’ is left undefined ( the medical description of this kind of shock goes back to the nineteenth-century discovery of ‘ hysteria ’ and its symptoms in women ) .
27 The first of the new spreadsheets , called Improv , which builds spreadsheets using simple English commands rather than manipulating clumsy grids of rows and columns , should sell 500,000 copies before June , when the price goes up from an introductory $19 to the full $195 .
28 Once the first grading has been successfully completed , the student goes on to the next stage of training , which concerns itself with basic semi-free sparring .
29 When the subordinate process terminates , control goes back to the calling processes .
30 Hot cross buns , Simnel cake and Easter biscuits ( see recipes on page 60 ) contain currants and mixed spices that have been eaten at Lent since Elizabethan times , although their use goes back to the Middle Ages when only the rich could afford spice .
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