Example sentences of "[pers pn] goes [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | So she goes up to the first man and she goes , hi , handsome , and he goes , hello , hello and he 's erected , right . |
2 | And she goes up to the two blokes and she grabs them by the balls and goes mm not bad , nice butt , you know ? |
3 | When it comes to her imagined transcriptions of Jip 's diary , she goes on in the same descriptive vein for a paragraph , then stops herself with an abrupt exclamation of ‘ No , he would n't say all that ’ ( 54 ) , whereupon she starts again in more concise fashion . |
4 | Because she , she goes in off the deep end and you |
5 | Mum , I do n't want that one then she goes back on the three , goes , yeah ? |
6 | Our own sauces , or whatever , erm , if my mother makes a cake , it goes on to the top shelf , but usually we just use everything . |
7 | But , you know they can pick it and er , it just flashes up and they have to put the right answer in , if they get the right answer it it goes on to the next one , if it |
8 | After that , it goes up with the biggest bang this side of the Manhattan Project . ’ |
9 | It goes along with the common complaint that there are areas and methods of serious investigation which are just not touched by scholastic doctrines . |
10 | erm Lewes has only had a mayoralty for a hundred years , and so its ceremonial is somewhat new , but one was able to draw on the traditions in places like Rye where it goes back to the thirteenth , fourteenth centuries and erm I used some of the phraseologies out of sixteenth century Rye documents and so on in my Lewes mayoralty on these sorts of ceremonial occasions , and introduced some of the ceremonial which I knew was authentic to mayoralties elsewhere in Sussex . |
11 | Probably , someone you would disapprove of I did n't know whether remember no probably not it goes back to the middle ages . |
12 | It goes back to the second world war , really . |
13 | Lewes has only had a mayor or two for a hundred years , and so its ceremonial is somewhat new , but one was able to draw on the traditions in places like Rye , where it goes back to the thirteenth/fourteenth centuries , and erm I used some of the phraseologies out of sixteenth century Rye documents and so on in my Lewes mayoralty on these sorts of ceremonial occasions , and introduced some of the ceremonial which I knew was authentic to mayoralties elsewhere in Sussex . |
14 | and then , once you 've claimed , it goes back to the original figure . |
15 | It goes back to the short term thing , you fear that they do n't do it as well . |
16 | It goes back to the 1969 Magritte exhibition , also curated by Sylvester , to which the Menil lent a number of works . |
17 | Just to mention one more thing the force video , a number of community affairs staff have mentioned to me that it 's out of date cos it goes back to the previous organisation |
18 | It goes back to the fifties when the local authority , in this case the Worthing Rural District Council would not approve the plan for a small development A Twenty Seven in near the roundabout at Manor . |
19 | It 's it 's er , the travellers tradition and it goes back to the old tradition of the Scottish people as well |
20 | ‘ It goes back to the old OSS days and the crusade we were running against Hitler along with your SOE and Dot Tuckey and people like that . |
21 | As he goes on to the next , I glance at his fingers . |
22 | I 've been reading Richard Hoggart 's The Uses of Literacy on this journey ; he goes on about the working class not being able to think " abstractly , generally , metaphysically or politically . |
23 | Beckett remarks in Our Exagmination Round his Factification for Incamination of Work in progress , that Joyce 's work is ‘ not about something : it is that something itself ( Beckett 1929 and 1972 : 14 ) , and he goes on in the central part of his oeuvre , the trilogy Molloy , Malone Dies , The Unnamable ( 1950 — 2 ) , to create a kind of autonomy of his own — — as the Unnamable remarks , ‘ it all boils down to a question of words … all words , there 's nothing else ’ ( 1959 and 1979 : 308 ) . |
24 | Where we might have expected him to grant her the respect of verse , he goes on in the same business-like prose : ‘ How now , Kate ? |
25 | Now , however , Freud expands that concept as well and interestingly enough he goes back to the first term he used for repression . |