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

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1 ‘ We 'd better go through to the sports field , ’ said Robert .
2 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 …
3 Now , almost ten years , on farmers there say they would not go back to the days of Government subsidies and control over what can be grown .
4 She would not go down for the fireworks .
5 The right hon. Member for Chingford said that he can not go along with the negotiations at Maastricht because he wants to protect Britain from ’ rabid dogs and dictators ’ — some might say from himself .
6 Do not go out on the streets , he begged his compatriots — instead , put a lighted candle in the window for reform .
7 You will not go out in the streets and you will not say anything in public .
8 Do n't you ever go down to the hostels or down
9 ‘ Now we have lost the horses we may as well go back by the paths . ’
10 I wo n't go again through the details of the Fax that failed , the chairman who was uncontactable by phone , the urgent letters posted second-class — and ‘ the statement that never was ’ delivered by the secretary as he disappeared on holiday .
11 He found that he could n't go out with the lads anymore , and he felt he 'd lost his happy-go-lucky side .
12 But they wo n't go out on the streets until officers using them have been fully trained .
13 Poverty was not experienced as a problem because there was so little that women wanted to spend money on ( 'No , I do n't go out in the evenings , Mother does n't like it . ’
14 She did n't go out in the evenings at all , feeling , in truth , no desire to see Mark 's old friends after her last disastrous escapade .
15 When it was just your Dad and I we , we could go out all evening and then , then come back to the tent , but when we 've got you two we have to be back in the , we ca n't go out in the evenings .
16 ‘ You do n't go back to the horses again ? ’
17 You ca n't go down to the shops , you ca n't go round your mum 's , you ca n't go to your auntie 's , you 're losing your freedom .
18 They only have to request it , and they can certainly go across to the shops . ’
19 ‘ Would never go down to the cellars like everyone else when the air-raid siren went .
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