Example sentences of "[noun sg] would go [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The senior Garda officer said a file on the allegation against the priest would go to the Director of Public Prosecutions , Eamon Barnes .
2 Police said that a report on the crash would go to the procurator fiscal at Ayr .
3 The local authority , on the other hand , say that ‘ the care given to the child ’ in section 31(2) ( b ) ( i ) means the care given by the mother to the child in this case and that , in any event , it is not clear that the child would go to the grandmother 's if a care order was not made , because the mother is still claiming , or was still claiming , that the care should be given to her .
4 You 'd get your good barley and the muck would go behind the screens .
5 Erm so it 's a question of how one can best do it , but initially it would be er the onus would go on the individual to use the the spaces not designated as short stay .
6 I wonder if the Secretary of the Cabinet would go into the box if I were found outside the Ministry of Agriculture .
7 That claim would go against the person that 's done the service .
8 '' ’ But in 1965 , it was announced that no new university would be built for ten years and that priority would go to the expansion of existing universities .
9 For example , housing strategy would go to the GLC .
10 And , on the assumption of the superiority of socialist organisation , the victory would go to the proletariat .
11 If the economy were boosted , most of the extra revenue and income would go into the service sector , money would be spent on our imports , and the balance of payments would get worse .
12 The Headmaster decided to charge for such a privilege , and said the money would go to the school fund , but a week later was seen showing off three new gowns with different coloured linings .
13 The DOH would be able to keep cash limits and the principle of making payments according to relative need by making weighted capitation payments to purchasing authorities , while money would go to the providers of services according to work done .
14 And police have suggested that soccer fans should be charged a hooligan levy when buying their match tickets , the money would go towards the cost of security at soccer grounds .
15 Councillors said the money would go towards the distress and disturbance caused by a move .
16 Although Freud saw ‘ civilized society perpetually threatened with disintegration ’ , apparently he did not foresee how far society would go in the liberation of instinctual drives …
17 Having flagged the issue and fired the interest of the minister , the Bank duo returned to the cooler , more workman-like atmosphere of life in Nairobi almost certain that sooner or later a project would go to the Bank board , and that it would almost certainly be approved .
18 Police said a report on the matter would go to the Crown Prosecution Service .
19 $1,500 million had been promised to countries disrupted by the Gulf crisis of late 1990 and early 1991 , and a similar sum would go to the creation of the new Global Environment Facility , while the special programme of assistance for Africa had attracted $7,400 million in new pledges .
20 During the interregnum which followed Alexander 's death he hoped the Russian crown would go to the Grand Duke Konstantin , whom he considered a moderate .
21 During the summer Dad would go to the allotment or at other times of the year start one or other of the jobs which he always seemed to have to do .
22 A spokesman for Vickers , which employs 1,800 staff equally split between plants in Leeds and Newcastle , said the company had always believed the order would go to the French .
23 ‘ You deserve it , but I was afraid they were n't the sort of people to make wills and the house would go to the Crown or whatever they do in these cases . ’
24 Such a breach would go to the root of the contract and would be a breach of a condition , giving the person acquiring the program the right to cancel the contract and recover the cost of the system plus any direct losses .
25 And Reverend Michael Jeffrey said he could n't beleive his son would go into the barn of his own free will .
26 We have already seen how unlikely it is that any party would go before the electorate avowing such differences : an exhibition of disunity would be too damaging to its chances of success .
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