Example sentences of "[verb] gone [adv] with the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Growing European integration has gone hand-in-hand with the growth of regional and sub — national movement .
2 Despite the fact that the museums in the former USSR were unable to meet their share of the costs after August 1991 , the exhibition has gone ahead with the support of the Kunsthaus in Zurich , in particular its director Felix Baumann , and with most of the financial risk underwritten by George Ortiz himself .
3 ‘ You will wake Widow MacIntosh — ‘ She is not here , you fool — she has gone off with the mob . ’
4 Fear of doors , entrances , gates etc. often occurs when a horse has been ( unwisely ) tied to a gate and has gone off with the gate ! !
5 no did n't like how he grouted it because she said there , things like a little nick in the tile , if he 'd gone in with the grouting it would n't of shown any and he did n't
6 If only I 'd gone along with the doctor 's proposals , it would have been over by now — completely and painlessly over , and any feelings of guilt I might have had as a result I would surely have dealt with ages ago .
7 The Indians had taken the radio telephones ( they 'd have gone off with the genny if they 'd had a crane ) and Caracas thought they 'd just broken down again so came as per normal .
8 Queen Mary had such an eye for antiques , you see , if she 'd seen them , she 'd have gone off with the lot .
9 On another day he could have gone home with the match ball . ’
10 Having gone down with the monarchy in the 1640s and learnt from that experience that its fortunes were closely dependent on those of the crown , the established church was more than ever determined to shore up the monarchy as a means of guaranteeing its own survival .
11 Penelope Huntley , who would very much have liked to have gone on with the discussion , found herself swept out of the office , and walked slowly down the road , flushed with a mixture of disappointment and excitement .
12 Our next plan is to go for endowment to stop the roller coaster ride we 've gone on with the city ’ .
13 She had seen Madge that morning when she had gone round with the news about the kiosk .
14 At Falmouth one sunny day with Valiant , I received a frantic call from our catering officer who had gone ashore with the motor boat on a falling tide .
15 His father had gone along with the masquerade .
16 If the industry had gone along with the sort of scheme that we were urging three or four years ago , it would be well geared up to meeting the challenge now , instead of being caught short by its friends — who I am sure the industry feels have in some way betrayed it .
17 When Margaret finally foundered , some hoped that he had gone down with the ship , but here he was as buoyant as the Vicar of Bray .
18 The ‘ pomps who were n't dead had gone off with the preacherman .
19 One hour later I had recovered consciousness , was lying drugged and bloodless in my bed , and my father had gone out with the shotgun he owned then to look for Old Saul .
20 ‘ We have gone ahead with the investment to make the company grow and there is obviously a relationship between the size of turnover and the numbers of people employed . ’
21 Sadly the opposition have gone down with the flu .
22 But look a little more deeply and you will see that something else has happened too ; if a number of people have gone down with the cold , does not it mean that a number of people have not gone down with the cold ?
23 You have gone along with the County Council , they want to move what they conceive to be an inset boundary .
24 I I asked the er the minister earlier about this question and I appreciate his difficulties being a home office minister rather than a foreign office minister and I quite understand his reluctance to er stray too far from his departmental portfolio but the reality is that the British government agreed that the European parliament should continue to meet in Strasbourg but we 've heard nothing from the minister as to where the money should come from er in order to make that commitment a reality because I 'm sure that every member opposite would say that the uncertainty about the present boundaries is not the er responsibility of the British government , that it 's a matter for the French government to sort out which boundaries er will be in place in the United Kingdom by June the ninth , the date of the European elections , but the reality is that the British government have gone along with the arrangement for having Strasbourg recognised as a er seat for the European parliament .
25 But something 's gone right with the lama ,
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