Example sentences of "go [adv prt] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | I appreciate that the number of cases in which the taker and driver away is not the driver who goes on to cause personal injury or damage will be comparatively few , but I ask my right hon. Friend whether it is necessary to make such a draconian change in the traditional principles of British law , or to do it by reversing the normal burden of proof . |
2 | The transformer unit , when Zener stabilized , goes on dissipating full power . |
3 | The decree goes on to allow Eastern Christians , separated from the Catholic Church , to receive Catholic sacraments in some circumstances . |
4 | Roberts goes on to link educational achievement with the level of economic development of the region of out-migration . |
5 | Consultative paper 66 , Draft Guidance on Proper Trades and Proper Markets in Relation to On-exchange Derivatives , price £5 , identifies what , in the SIB 's view , is a proper trade and goes on to consider proper markets . |
6 | Much actual sociology of culture presumes , in a way inevitably , the typical or dominant relations of the period with which it is concerned ; it goes on to adduce detailed evidence of these . |
7 | The proposal goes on to list specific topics in this course for years 3–5 , for which the project grant would be especially useful . |
8 | He compares war in modern circumstances with a plague , and tries to make us see that we have exactly the same universal common interest in transcending military conflict that we have in getting plague under control , and that it 's necessary to use all our intelligence and imagination to break the millennial connection of intersocial change with war , and then he goes on to make practical proposals . |
9 | The cowboy , by contrast , stays faithful to his British films , however limited their ambition , becomes a director and goes on to make serious pictures . |
10 | This book describes their course of training and goes on to relate personal recollections of their wartime service , bringing to the fore the relatively unknown part played in World War Two by the TAG . |
11 | The warning notice then goes on to address specific risks involved in particular types of transactions such as futures , options ( including both buying and writing of options ) and contracts for differences . |
12 | From that possibility , he goes on to blame bad potty-training for all her character defects . |
13 | At first , the payment entitled them to go on receiving food-subsidy coupons from the team , even though they were no longer working for it . |
14 | Of course , you will need to go on taking basic fire safety precautions even when smoke alarms are fitted in your home . |
15 | Basically that argument was simply that the country could not afford to go on expanding non-productive sectors such as social services . |
16 | You who must decide whether you are prepared to go on allowing dangerous aggression to mar life for all of us . |
17 | to go on opening quiet flowers to the wind |
18 | The courts have consistently held that if a pecuniary interest exists it is not necessary to go on to consider reasonable suspicion or real likelihood of bias . |
19 | But London hotels can not expect to go on charging high prices when they can not even be bothered to welcome guests in their own language . |
20 | John 's first price limit is an imaginary £500 , chosen to provide a working setup for the bass player who 's started to practise with a band , and who hopes to go on to play small gigs … |
21 | Robertson ( 1986 ) also argued that big companies and the public sector can not afford to go on employing large numbers of people , as the cost of co-ordinating their activities rises and as pensions become more expensive . |
22 | This in turn generates a need to go on making new perceptions and associations in a way that is recognized both in animals and in man ( Humphrey and Keeble , 1976 ) . |
23 | It is felt that much of the progress students make whilst in college will be lost if they are not able to go on to meet fresh demands in new situations . |
24 | Then , in addition , it decided it must limit local authorities ' powers to go on increasing local rates . |
25 | The answer may turn out to be that the main results of university education for which intrinsic value can reasonably be claimed — such as the activity of critical thought — are included as main elements in the educational process itself , so that it is pointless to go on putting essential questions off by starting with questions about the value of the results of an Arts education . |
26 | At the other end of the building some very different experiments had been going on involving nuclear physicists who knew of the existence but few of the details of ZETA . |
27 | In any event , all the adventurers who can see what 's going on feel excruciating hunger pangs and take an automatic Wound . |
28 | In 1978 , Mr Chance became liaison officer of a team for the mentally handicapped at North Tees Hospital , going on to become mental health officer to Cleveland county up till his retirement eight years ago . |
29 | The percentage of people who were going on to start basic training stood at four per cent in September 1984 . |
30 | We shall look now at some of the comments which have been made and attempt an evaluation of the scheme before going on to discuss subsequent developments . |