Example sentences of "go [adv] [prep] the [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 If on the other hand it goes right through the C/L continue your turn and make a 40° intercept the other way ( ie onto Hdg 130° in fig 52 ) .
2 The fight to save wildlife still goes on in the Shetlands .
3 Syria 's response that it ‘ can not control what goes on in the Bekaa ’ and that Turkey ‘ should first try to solve the Kurdish problem within its own borders ’ has served only to confirm Turkish suspicions about Syrian intentions .
4 What goes on in the US today has a habit of repeating itself in the UK tomorrow .
5 Martha , who had decided to stop thinking about the inconvenience they were causing , asked Woodie not to stop at the boats ; they would like to go on to the New King 's Road .
6 From Seathwaite follow the access road to Long House Farm ( 1 mile ) but bypass the farm to go on to the Walna Scar Road ( actually a bridleway ) .
7 However , as I said , the industry broadly goes along with the CITB 's proposals and with this order , which embodies them .
8 Music 24 songs and nothin' to hear Geoff Dyer goes down to the Springsteen river , and finds that it 's dry
9 Local legend states that when it hears the church clock strike twelve it goes down to the River Avon to drink .
10 The philosophy that if it goes down in the US it must be going up in Europe has meant that Smurfit is looking to Europe as its main engine for growth in the months to come , when it must decide how to spend the $1bn cash raised from the recent financial restructuring with Morgan Stanley .
11 I were just so psyched up on Wednesday and then I had to go in on the Friday before so I did n't
12 She 'd decided to go along with the FBI for a laugh , and because it might possibly help British Intelligence .
13 Scientists at the Met Office are prepared to go along with the US plan .
14 ‘ Of course there is always the risk that other bidders will decide to go along to the DTI and offer to drill more wells than us , or deeper ones , perhaps in the manner of a loss-leader .
15 I decided to go alone on the Sunday morning .
16 ‘ I like to go down to the Albert Dock but I ca n't manage it very well without the scooter . ’
17 ‘ Brother , ’ he whispered , ‘ we have the Regent 's permission to go down to the Springall house now , to examine and take anything we wish .
18 All the same , she wished she had been stronger in her advice to Nona not to go down by the Cutty Sark .
19 It 's right , you know where the , the alley goes through into the Haymarket
20 ‘ We may be out of the running but we can still have a big say in who goes through to the United States , ’ said Hughes .
21 He was in the side which beat Norfolk by just one run in the semi-final to go through to the Lord 's final on Aug 26 .
22 He had arrived in the late afternoon of a perfect summer 's day , was shortly to go off to the Alps and then the Himalayas and had not touched rock for a couple of years , so the urge for activity was upon him .
23 Nobles attending the court were ordered to go first to the apartments of Dara Shukoh and there make their morning obeisance before going on to the Diwan-i-khas to greet Shah Jehan .
24 Well like what are the band doing after practice , are they doing anything , they 're probably all going on to the Cutty Sark at Greenwich or something .
25 Philip who lives in Darlington , and attended the town 's Longfield Comprehensive school before going on to the Queen Elizabeth Sixth Form College , has already represented his country at under 15 and under 16 levels .
26 On Monday evening booksellers can meet author Nigel Williams ( Faber ) , and afterwards any delegate not otherwise engaged is invited to join BA president John Hitchin for a conference first , a President 's Personal Spring Supper at Cockington Court , before going on to the David & Charles Disco .
27 I thought this must be the end for all three of us but in fact all the policeman wanted to do was to stop any traffic going on to the Via Emilia as a big convoy was on its way south towards Parma .
28 Mr Haydn Cook , chief executive of the Friarage , said negotiations were going on with the Scorton hospital about its contract for the forthcoming year .
29 For example , the TV drama ‘ Thin Air ’ in 1988 brought out some of the unpleasantness about the ‘ wheeler-dealing ’ that has been going on during the Docklands boom years .
30 By January 1928 the preparatory negotiations were going on between the TUC and the Confederation of Employers Organizations and the Federation of British Industries , the two main employers ' organisations .
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