Example sentences of "[adj] to go [adv] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It will be necessary to see how far it is possible to go along with a strict criterion-referenced system or what kind of compromises may be worked out if such a system has advantages of motivating pupils and aiding changes in curriculum . |
2 | But the assumption that all morality means sexual morality is too widespread to go down without a few squawks of protest . |
3 | Now the deal looks likely to go through at a whopping $7.5 billion , about $110 a share . |
4 | ‘ No , I 'm sure you 'll be able to go home in a few days . |
5 | LIBERAL Democrat candidate Rosamund Jordan has said she is concerned that the developer of a proposed five-a-side football complex at Claiville Common , Middlesbrough , seems reluctant to go ahead without a licensed bar . |
6 | It 's important to go somewhere with a good kindergarten where they can just be looked after or taught to ski . |
7 | South African captain Kepler Wessels 's verdict on his side 's 107-run defeat was that it was difficult to go straight into an international match without a warm-up game . |
8 | Both he and Mickey Skinner have a limited number of appearances at Twickenham to look forward to and they will surely be anxious to go out on a high note . |
9 | In the capitalist West new markets opened up , and the industries that had become so busy and productive in the war effort were ready to go again in a postwar boom . |
10 | As he was all poshed up in his best uniform , ready to go off on a 48-hour pass , he was not best pleased at this turn of events . |
11 | It was not , however , so easy to persuade an angry , kicking woman even as tiny as Ashi to go through without a desperate struggle . |