Example sentences of "go [adv prt] to [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It examines the conditions under which a voting equilibrium exists ; and then goes on to representative democracy . |
2 | Unenamoured of either , he rejected both in favour of the career of a scribe here his own account goes on to other things becoming a clerk to the imperial divan in 922/1516 , and rising thence through the office of private secretary to two Grand Vezirs and that of to become nisanci in 941/1534 . |
3 | Curing the deficiency in this area , thirdly , is the necessary base for a much larger proportion of our age groups than at present ( about 15% ) to go on to advanced education — in both academic and especially applied studies . |
4 | You skirt Godinton Park to go on to Great Chart . |
5 | We used to go along to various churches in the area playing music . |
6 | Forget the grinning drummer or the antics of the bass player ( the first to go down to stroppy retaliation ) , this band are a scorched earth antidote to faint hearts and floppy fringes . |
7 | Figure 2 shows what happens when you tell the computer to obey exactly the same drawing rule , but going on to various depths of recursion . |
8 | The next day the RUC tried to block a 4,000 strong Paisleyite protest march from the centre of Belfast , but the marchers broke through and rampaged through the centre of the city breaking shop windows , stoning the Catholic-owned International Hotel and going on to Sandy Row where they tried to burn down a bookie 's shop which employed Catholics . |
9 | The elaborate leaving cards prepared for colleagues going on to new jobs or retiring are a remarkable testimony to the good humour of advertising people who see the comedy in the serious daily " grind " of their work . |
10 | As for the staff , they 're going on to new jobs . |
11 | You may be going on to new material before thoroughly mastering previous material . |
12 | But we know are going on to double shift on Monday |
13 | We began at Bakewell , the central town of the Peaks , where we visited the 14th Century church to see its celebrated collection of mediaeval monuments , did some souvenir shopping and could n't resist a genuine Bakewell Pudding before going on to nearby Chatsworth , the ‘ Palace of the Peak ’ . |
14 | Such a dramatic decline made possible an improvement in the opportunity index , the measure of the percentage of all eleven-year-old children going on to secondary education . |
15 | The 11 + examination tested what teachers believed it was important for children to know before going on to secondary school . |
16 | By 1939 , nearly 80 per cent of pupils going on to secondary schools came from public elementary schools and the balance from private schools of various kinds . |
17 | Extending from the individual partnerships there are wide varieties of helpful relationships between groups or classes of children and a department of a business or a small company going on to whole business/school schemes . |
18 | Contracts of employment were unknown and I remember the gloom at home if Dad announced that the works were going on to short time . |
19 | ROOT SYSTEM : - Roots may be long and slender , going down to great depth and absorbing water from distant sources ; or very shallow rooted and superficial , catching rain water before it evaporates away . |
20 | More and more of the farms are going over to pasteurized milk , their produce is sent to the cooperatives , the butter and the cheese no longer have the characteristic ripe flavours one used to expect . |
21 | Got to stop and then you say you 're going up to middle class . |
22 | So when you got pass there Ju do n't forget you say I am going up to middle class ! |
23 | Stevenson , a quick-moving , stocky northerner with a distinguished record in every possible branch of the Met , was rumoured to be going up to Assistant Commissioner just as soon as the present incumbent retired . |
24 | If you are going up to senior positions movement is essential ; even people who may plateau out at middle management will have done a lot of different jobs for three , four , five years . |
25 | I have a granddaughter now going up to Burnt Mill and I think myself , they could n't have done any better in the grammar school . |
26 | P.B. They might have changed their tune , they might have changed their job description , but the job description was she was going out to primary schools . |
27 | She also maintains she would never consider going back to full-time employment and advised other women with good business ideas to ‘ go for it ’ . |
28 | Those who had time also diligently collected their most important legal documents — the deeds of ownership to property , the maps of their orange groves and fields , their tax returns and their identity papers going back to Ottoman times — and packed them into bags and tins along with family heirlooms and jewellery and their front door keys . |
29 | There is an even older architectural tradition , going back to Roman times . |
30 | " Yes , oysters — going back to Roman times . |