Example sentences of "[modal v] go [adv prt] in the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 We must go up in the loft and find your clothes
2 We 'll go up in the lift , alright ?
3 No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning .
4 No , he asks you to please stay for supper and we 'll go on in the morning .
5 We 'll spend the night there , and then , if she 's recovered , we 'll go on in the morning through Lima to Tacna in the south of Peru .
6 I 'll go over in the spring . ’
7 We 'll go down in the morning . ’
8 Seventeen and four it is , you owe me one and threepence halfpenny , and it 'll go down in the book .
9 But the settlement is believed to have given Kuwait assurances that its production could go up in the summer if the market is strong enough .
10 some members of a band could go out in the evening and pop into a whole bunch of places to ask if they will give them a gig .
11 You 'd go out in the morning and be back again in the afternoon . ’
12 You did n't consider that , you er i As I say you 'd go out in the morning .
13 He used to come into the shop after a little while and he 'd go back in the kitchen again and he 'd come back again later on .
14 Nowadays the attitude seems totally the opposite ; the modern-day prop appears to say : ‘ I may go down in the scrummage , but I will never go back ’ .
15 He would go up in the lift .
16 Pop would go out in the morning scouring the countryside for meat and vegetables , and sometimes having to dive into a culvert if there was a raid ; meanwhile the officers would shepherd us into trenches and play games until the raid was over .
17 Well presumably would go back in the village and if you asked other villagers look how much has X grown on that bit of land they will tell you .
18 When we took the step we did last May , we did n't desert the Tory Party , we rebelled against it and I for one said that I would go back in the fullness of time , I just hoped I could go back with something to show for it .
19 The case was heard by an exceptionally unconventional judge , but one of sound common sense , Mr Justice Caulfield , who more recently found fame in his unorthodox but equally commonsensical summing-up in the Jeffrey Archer action , where his description of Mrs Archer as ‘ fragrant ’ , no doubt causing great embarrassment to the lady , will go down in the history of judicial extravagance .
20 But one thing is very clear , that Councillor will go down in the history of this city as one of it 's most outstanding sons , who endeared himself to people in all walks of life .
21 Consequently , some horses will go down in the paddock and eat more grass , others will walk or canter up and down the fence endlessly expecting their food , while others will call , ‘ I want my dinner ! ’ , or strike at their stable doors , or paw at the fencing .
22 Yeah you can go out in the hall or go in the syndicate room
23 What Nanette has said has been an important introduction and if yo , if what sa you have prepared altogether is legible then perhaps give it to Eileen and it can go out in the Synod papers that will be helpful .
24 ‘ I think — I 'm almost sure I will live , if we can go out in the garden together sometimes .
25 This can go back in the cupboard .
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