Example sentences of "go [prep] [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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31 I would n't , I would n't mind going for a few days
32 Uplands kept its wholesaling operation going for a few years after I left , but it does n't exist any more ; I think the day of the really small wholesaler is gone . ’
33 They will also be able to supply you with a list of suitable short-term homes for the elderly in your area , to which your parent might consider going for a few weeks each year in order that you may have a holiday , if there is no other member of the family who could take over your responsibilities in your absence .
34 Going for a little walkies !
35 In this way , Hammer became a victim of its own phenomenal success , always going for the big thrills and unable to get away with offering anything less than what was expected from a ‘ Hammer ’ film .
36 It was almost certainly going through the final stages of the digestive process .
37 Not only were we going through the timid rituals of conventional courtship after a six-month diet of take-away sex , but I was the one who insisted that it stay that way until we were legally united .
38 The standard grief reaction going through the five phases of denial , anger , bargaining , depression and finally acceptance over a period of two years but sometimes with progressive insulation of emotions resulting in a sense of isolation .
39 I am back in the little room at the top of the spiral staircase on Wednesday morning and I am sitting on the Squeez-Ee box , with the minute in front of me , going through the remaining contents of the Quaker Oats archive , page by dusty page .
40 Schiller had pleaded , once again going through the many reasons why it was right for him to gain a seat on the council .
41 I was going through the death-registry books in the cartrio civil of Bom Jesus da Mata , a market town in the sugar-plantation region of Pernambuco in the Brazilian North-East .
42 Would not the courts therefore be able to take into account the facts of offences without going through the restrictive provisions in this ill-considered new Bill ?
43 As Martin Walker says : ‘ The Oxford of the late Sixties was going through the heady delights of the sexual revolution .
44 The other system is known as record-playback and involves the skilled craft operator going through the physical motions of machining the first piece of the batch with the machine in record mode .
45 They keep wanting to supply goods without going through the proper procedures .
46 I had no intention of going through the proper channels ; it could take weeks .
47 Many standards related to document processing have just been published or are currently going through the later stages of the ISO process on their way to becoming official standards .
48 This pursuit of around 700 life histories occupied his spare time for years : ‘ I spent 10 years in Nottingham library going through the old newspapers and noting every reference to cricket up to 1880 .
49 Henry 's been going through the old ledgers but can not find any sign of a fiddle .
50 The erm election note 's up , I mean it , we were going through the local candidates through you know when the important dates are ?
51 And as Lewis ( who had already read through the statement ) watched his chief going through the same pages , he felt more than a little encouraged .
52 Liz , from King 's Lynn , Norfolk , said : ‘ I am just sorry that families we know could be going through the same feelings we had when our men left for the Gulf .
53 This is why people who are the same age as one another usually end up being friends because they are going through the same experiences simultaneously .
54 ‘ We were from different cultures , but they kept me going through the bad times .
55 Well that 's what I thought it just seemed to say they were gon na have sort of cycle ways going through the green wedges along where I cycle already .
56 Bringing that thought into consciousness means going through the classical stages of acknowledging the anger and the pain before finding acceptance .
57 It was nearly dark when we left Fontanellato and , with no lights about , it was hard to know where we were going after a few kilometres .
58 ( It 's always spelt N O E , and answer has an E. ) One does have this feeling that people were getting wind of Mr Edward Heath walking down the street , and were going out the back doors of the house .
59 Alex and Judy were self funded but had some sponsorship from FWWG and John Wood Group PLC , again going towards the Sick Children 's Hospital .
60 I do support this , which is Michael 's resolution because we should be looking at the financial costs and er going into the practical aspects of this and let's , let's face it er there are many aspects which are financially unviable and we should be aware of exactly where we stand on that .
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