Example sentences of "he [modal v] go [adv] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Poor fellow , perhaps he ought to go home and rest .
2 Mr explained the situation concerning cutting the hedges and the council agreed that he should go ahead and do them if possible .
3 If he had to go , he should go quietly and give continued moral support to the paper .
4 Someone suggested he should go out and read the Riot Act , but he declined .
5 He must go away so I could too .
6 Now he must go away and I dare say I shall never see him again , ’ Joan said woefully , lagging behind despite Anne 's grumbles and gazing down at the ring .
7 And who , sitting in the stalls next to John Hinckley at a matinee of Taxi Driver , would have guessed that their neighbour 's conclusion from watching the film was that , in order to prove his love for Jodie Foster , he must go out and shoot Ronald Reagan ?
8 Ormrod J. purports to identify the essence of marriage as a ‘ relationship between man and woman' ; but to meet the problems implicit in this idea , he must go further and define it in terms of the capacity for ‘ natural heterosexual intercourse ’ .
9 ‘ I say he must either wreak his vengeance on Wedale and retreat , or he must go further and seek to destroy you and your whole power . ’
10 He 'll go backwards and forwards in that field so often .
11 If he wants to import vehicles or components from Taiwan or Singapore or Hong Kong into Europe , he 'll go ahead and do it , regardless of the economic consequences for the European countries concerned .
12 He 'll go tomorrow or Wednesday .
13 I 'm sure he 'll go somewhere and sleep first .
14 So he 'll go out and bring information into the group from various different sources .
15 He 'll go out and get that five to ten bus or five past ten bus .
16 Well I , he 'll go back and find another door er , er back up to where he lives .
17 At nineteen , he thinks that after he 's finished his legal studies he 'll go off and become a Turk in Turkey , or a muleteer in Spain , or a cameleer in Egypt .
18 ‘ None , none ! ’ — fearing he might go downstairs and find Frankenstein in a state he would possibly mistake for lifeless .
19 He lay awake through the night wishing he could go home or into the sitting room and watch a horror movie , and then , as the room paled with the threat of day , he drifted into an uneasy sleep , finally waking in full light with a foul taste in his mouth and the disjointed memory of a dream in which he was trapped in a lift dressed in women 's underwear and wondering how to explain it when the fire brigade finally came and rescued him .
20 He wished that he could go home and that none of this had happened .
21 Yes , he could go there if he wished as a lay evangelist .
22 I said we could select the venues , he could write his own cabaret show ; he could go out and do 20 minutes and pull £100 a week , which was a lot of money in the 60's .
23 It 's different from Rangers where , if he had an injury , he could go out and buy .
24 Then he could go out and enjoy himself unashamedly and leave serious , studious Doctor Jekyll to get on with his important , life-saving work . ’
25 ‘ And he 'd go away and chuck it in the bin or down the sink and come back with a new one .
26 he 'd go upstairs and Shirley would have put all the clean clothes back in the wardrobe and he 'd go in the wardrobe oh , no I wo n't wear that , no I wo n't wear that and half the time she found the cleanest clothes were all rolled up under the bed .
27 ‘ I think he really enjoyed the first few , then the stories and the music got so trite , but he 'd go ahead and do them .
28 He said he 'd go quietly if I did n't make it public , and I agreed .
29 He 'd go back and explain to Dadda .
30 And if he could remember where the shop was , he 'd go back and sue the bastards .
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