Example sentences of "[pers pn] goes [adv prt] [prep] [art] [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 We put a match to ours and it goes up with a rocket-like roar , heating the yurt in a flash .
9 After that , it goes up with the biggest bang this side of the Manhattan Project . ’
10 It goes along with the common complaint that there are areas and methods of serious investigation which are just not touched by scholastic doctrines .
11 Before she is finally arrested , she shoots a number of them , and lobs a grenade into the wings , where it goes off with a loud report .
12 It goes back for a hundred years or more .
13 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 .
14 Probably , someone you would disapprove of I did n't know whether remember no probably not it goes back to the middle ages .
15 It goes back to the second world war , really .
16 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 .
17 and then , once you 've claimed , it goes back to the original figure .
18 It goes back to the short term thing , you fear that they do n't do it as well .
19 It goes back to the 1969 Magritte exhibition , also curated by Sylvester , to which the Menil lent a number of works .
20 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
21 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 .
22 It 's it 's er , the travellers tradition and it goes back to the old tradition of the Scottish people as well
23 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 .
24 As he goes on to the next , I glance at his fingers .
25 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 .
26 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 ) .
27 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 ?
28 ‘ The relief ! ’ cries Howard , as he goes about in an old pair of jeans , mending the roof and painting the window-frames .
29 If your candidate is going to research the level of pollution in a local river , he does n't stand on the bridge and look ; he either wades in to feel for junk or he goes in with a professional diver to find it .
30 Now , however , Freud expands that concept as well and interestingly enough he goes back to the first term he used for repression .
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