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

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1 All these are not merely parts of our descriptive model ; we assume that they correspond very directly to aspects of the activity which goes on in the mind of speakers ; by contrast the relation of instantiation which links particular items of the English vocabulary and the elements E and P is metalinguistic , since in any particular use of a linguistic structure the word-meanings which are present , supported of course by the word-forms which are the overt carriers of the meanings , are the Es and the Ps , rather than being related to them .
2 The result is an oxygen linkage and a molecule of water which goes off in the sap .
3 The lesson of the Square One Principle is this : the person who has the courage to go back when necessary is the one who goes on in the end .
4 Who goes up and who goes down in the rugby union leagues has still to be sorted out too …
5 There was this scene right at the end where the woman lights a cigarette after she 's left the gas on the cooker on and everything goes up in an explosion ; and then in the very next advert there was a car driving through a field , and the whole field went up in a sheet of flame .
6 The philosophy that if it goes down in the US it must be going up in Europe has meant that Smurfit is looking to Europe as its main engine for growth in the months to come , when it must decide how to spend the $1bn cash raised from the recent financial restructuring with Morgan Stanley .
7 And it goes out in a blaze of colour — a spectacular firework display which starts at 6.45pm and goes on into the night .
8 I mean it 's it 's happened and I was ha I was so interested in the subject that I asked Mr for a copy of the report where it goes back in the history and of course it is the history of trading standards and , and so on .
9 So you 're filtering it before it goes in the machine and still we 're saying , why do n't we filter it as it comes out the machine , before it goes back in the tank .
10 Howard ca n't help laughing to himself as he goes down in the lift .
11 and er , he said if he 's not better , any better when he goes back in a fortnight he 's gon na send him to a chest specialist , but you 've been a lot better have n't you ?
12 When he goes out in the evening he is invariably with his mates whose influence may encourage him to take risks .
13 ’ We ca n't attend their committee meetings which is where all the real decisions are made , and we ca n't get information about what goes on in a committee meeting .
14 I think especially in the , in the hotel project it 's useful to have a little bar chart saying this is what goes on in a bathroom .
15 Well that does n't show any er expertise in what goes on in a solicitor 's office at all .
16 Never know what goes on in a nutter 's mind .
17 The observer 's task is then to observe what goes on in a classroom and , every three seconds , to tick the category that best describes what has been happening during that period .
18 The local nicks at Penzance and St Ives must have some idea what goes on in a set-up like that on their doorsteps . ’
19 How how can we tell , because as an officer , and this is this is Richard 's point , as an officer how do you know what goes on in the barrack room ?
20 What goes on in the US today has a habit of repeating itself in the UK tomorrow .
21 In other words you can have what goes on in the brain at the hardware level does or at the level of nuance does n't necessarily have to correlate with what goes on at a high level description .
22 Syria 's response that it ‘ can not control what goes on in the Bekaa ’ and that Turkey ‘ should first try to solve the Kurdish problem within its own borders ’ has served only to confirm Turkish suspicions about Syrian intentions .
23 What these two exponents have in common is their deep concern for the education of children and their considerable reservations about what goes on in the name of education in our present institutions .
24 Kerr deplores the invasion of privacy in small houses , where visitors rub shoulders with the tradespeople , where the sounds of the scullery can be heard in the dining-room , where the kitchen can hear what goes on in the drawing-room , and the dresser or cooking-range may be seen in the kitchen .
25 People who live in towns donlt understand what goes on in the countryside.It 's hard for us to explain why this great tradition should be preserved , but it is n't the barbaric activity it 's made out to be .
26 People who live in towns donlt understand what goes on in the countryside.It 's hard for us to explain why this great tradition should be preserved , but it is n't the barbaric activity it 's made out to be .
27 Erm , the , the regional conference will be a major national and indeed international conference and I think it 's important that are there to participate and influence what goes on in the future .
28 Classroom infrastructure tends to appear similar in different societies ; what is most various is the bureaucratic superstructure , which attempts to translate rhetoric into regulations and routine procedures for monitoring and controlling what goes on in the classrooms .
29 One view is that insider research calls for the free-ranging exploration of what goes on in the classroom without the constraint of any preconceived theory .
30 do a quick kill on the tarmac and see what goes on in the town and then they move on
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