Example sentences of "go [adv prt] [verb] in [art] " in BNC.

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1 That it goes on moving in a straight line , rather than in circles , followed from what Descartes described as the immutability and simplicity of the conserving operation .
2 Part of the overall argument of this book is that , as the Roman catholic church is principal validator or legitimator of the Southern state along with the concept of the national entity , what that state goes on to do in the field of social ethics can not be separated out from the responsibilities of the church .
3 And I 've always heard what Jesus goes on to say in the context of that understanding of the text .
4 And he goes on to reveal in the letter that he had just taken a day off ‘ work ’ to watch a Tennessee high school football game with Ginger Alden , the 20-year-old Tennessee beauty queen who bore a startling resemblance to his mother and whom he called ‘ little Gladys ’ .
5 But I would hope , I mean it has given me the the wish to go on living in a similar kind of situation .
6 David began to think that it might be possible to go on living in the same house as Julia and Anthony without either betraying himself or suffering unendurable frustration .
7 It was the coldest winter for years , but Tess and Marian had to go on working in the snow .
8 What I want to go on to discuss in the , in the last part of the lecture is another way in which Freud 's work looks , looks backwards , or seems to look backwards .
9 But does n't does n't it often work out though that the people who erm need more training , often are the ones that have resisted going on training in the past .
10 Next month he travels to Nuremburg to do parish work before going on to work in the archives in the Papal capital .
11 Very often pupils will benefit from the opportunity to see and handle , and discuss a few selected artefacts at close hand , before going on to work in the display galleries .
12 If you 're thinking of going along to join in the fun , there 's something going on every day and evening until next Friday night .
13 And it will be sited on land troops trained on before going off to fight in the Somme .
14 Bristling with moonstones , the collar was primitive and barbaric ; the mastiff of a prince of medieval Persia might have worn it for going out hawking in a miniature .
15 ‘ I was starting to make the Sunday dinner and Brian said he was going out to play in the park .
16 well you might have heard stories about elderly people going out shopping in the middle of the night .
17 I 'm going back to live in the studio , Klein .
18 Going back to work in a different job helped for a while , however .
19 While I 'm digging that garden she used to go out roll in the trench what I 'd dug and soon as I went in for a drink she was in there before me !
20 Moses then goes out to pray in the desert .
21 ‘ I do n't want to go back to fight in the war , ’ said Laslzo , 21 , from Becej , as he waved his mother goodbye .
22 Nurse Eileen Farragher said : ‘ Physically he 'll be okay to go back to work in a few weeks — but mentally he 's still shocked . ’
23 We would go on loving in the same old way …
24 Er I 'll go on to explain in the product range one of their new products we 're introducing this year .
25 I could n't go on living in a place where I was no use , ’ she spoke with the quietness and desperate authority of someone who had discovered they could give up no more ground and live .
26 They were led in Parliament by a handful of quite senior Ministers ready to resign rather than go on serving in an administration they accused of appeasement to Hitler and downright obstinacy towards rearmament for defence .
27 One or two sentences at your discretion to introduce the first prize winners who will go on to compete in the national finals in London on 16 March 1991 at the Natural History Museum .
28 If , on the other hand , gases continue to escape while the lava is being erupted , bubbles will go on growing in the lava , and these will be preserved in the rock when it cools .
29 We 've got which I 'll go on to expand in a minute about .
30 ‘ The shop frontage , ’ the young man went on to explain in a tired voice , ‘ is twenty-two feet .
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