Example sentences of "[adv] go [adv] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’ |
2 | ‘ We 'd better go through to the sports field , ’ said Robert . |
3 | If you want to know any more about what he 's doing you 'd better go up to the camp and ask him yourself . ’ |
4 | ‘ I suppose we 'd better go back to the car , ’ he said in a carefully neutral tone . |
5 | ‘ We 'd better go back to the car , ’ he announced , and , without more ado placed a hand beneath her elbow and guided her back to his car . |
6 | We 'd better go back to the burrow . |
7 | He supposed he 'd better go back into the ballroom . |
8 | But er she 's coming a and gives him twenty five pounds for what he 's done oh he came in , he came into the kitchen , it 's ever so funny , he came into the kitchen to tell me about this you see Anyway he came back in there and I said to him I 'm not really enthusiastic about the thought er thinking that I was involved with this as well so the dear woman turned round and said to me it 's only your husband so I said well I 'd better go back in the kitchen where I know my place . |
9 | I came back on the Friday night and erm , well I 've packed my job in at the Transport Department , I better go down to the Recruiting Office and see what else . |
10 | ‘ We 'd better go down to the stream and hide in the bushes , ’ said Geoffrey . |
11 | If you ca n't control your temper you 'd better go down to the canteen and help yourself to a drink . |
12 | ‘ Oh dear , ’ said his father , ‘ I think we 'd better go home to the cave . |
13 | Miss Honey said to the class , ‘ I think you 'd all better go out to the playground and amuse yourselves until the next lesson . ’ |
14 | Now upstairs there are people working , so when you get to the far end we ask you do n't go straight upstairs , if you can wait please and we 'll we 'll we 'll all you 'll all go up in the room together , . |
15 | This can all go straight in the bin this with all this lot . |
16 | A Rumbelows spokesman said the £10,000 jackpot would not necessarily go straight into the champion 's bank balance . |
17 | ‘ I think I 'd sooner go back to the house . ’ |
18 | Ye 'd best go in before the rain . ’ |
19 | I will not go on about the statistics . |
20 | On it were the words : ‘ Do not go on to the moor . |
21 | Ron said that I should not go on to the track and kill myself because I might pull a hamstring . |
22 | An Italian flair does not go amiss in the Elgar : Accardo 's impetuosity gives a new slant to the score , his intensity in the Andante an immediacy . |
23 | He promised himself he would not go up to the tower to observe the stars . |
24 | Due to the pre-UK release — ha ha — of ‘ Your Arsenal ’ , much is forgiven concerning that dreaded disappearance from Australia last year ( He does n't just do it here then — IM ) , but a snappy return trip would not go astray in the hearts of the young distraught fans , please please please … |
25 | As it is usually necessary to demonstrate that the project will not go ahead without the grant , work can not start until the grant application has been accepted . |
26 | ‘ But the following Tuesday , British Coal 's area director visited Point of Ayr and said the second phase would not go ahead during the review period , which effectively means development plans at Point of Ayr are on ice . ’ |
27 | ‘ It 's a case at the moment that I can not go ahead with the case because I can not afford £700 , ’ said Barbara . |
28 | Anchor have said they will not go ahead with the project without a liquor licence . |
29 | While most , for example narcissi and scillas , should be planted as soon as they are bought , tulips should not go in to the garden until November . |
30 | I could not go in through the house because of the servants . |