Example sentences of "go [adv prt] [prep] [art] [num ord] " in BNC.

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1 It 's the relationship between the client and the advertiser which goes on for the next two years .
2 The score then goes on to the last musical number in Act 3 , ‘ A thousand thousand ways ’ , which is a song repeated by the chorus .
3 She has been voted the best assistant in the store by her colleagues , and goes on to the next leg of the competition , the district semi-finals on April 10th .
4 If you do not reply , the PP does not repeat but goes on to the next question .
5 Once the first grading has been successfully completed , the student goes on to the next stage of training , which concerns itself with basic semi-free sparring .
6 As he goes on to the next , I glance at his fingers .
7 But , you know they can pick it and er , it just flashes up and they have to put the right answer in , if they get the right answer it it goes on to the next one , if it
8 ‘ We will obviously monitor everything that goes on over the next 12 months ’ , he says ‘ We can only hope that when we do our assessments of need we can support that need with the finances we 've been given .
9 As might be expected from data reported earlier , positive attitudes as measured by all five factors were significantly associated with willingness to go on to a second round of review and reporting .
10 He decided to go on to the second and third caves , determined to find what he was looking for .
11 When you are ready to go on to the next potency , the whole process is repeated with a single poppy seed granule of the desired strength .
12 We must insist on a system of tests that will be for the benefit of the pupils ; that will test what each one can do in practical work and in theoretical understanding ; and will serve as a motive for each to go on to the next stage .
13 If he does this then a sociological perspective has been brought to bear on the first idea and the researcher is ready to go on to the next step , which will be one of limiting his ideas to a feasible scheme of work .
14 But evolution ploughed on remorselessly , enabling only the most adaptable to go on to the next stage .
15 Erm , right , what I want to do this week , is to go on to the next er , work of Freud 's , that follows after erm , group psychology , or rather to the next two , because I 'm gon na back these two books together for , hi there , , erm gon na back these two books together , because as we 'll see , they , they really deal with the same subject .
16 Such arguments over values , political or religious , were to go on into the next decade .
17 Trident sub goes down for the first time
18 I should need to go in on the eleventh to clear up I expect .
19 If you would like to help in any way , or would like to go along on the next trip in September , contact Keith Taylor on 1252 29806 .
20 Under the new policy , anyone working on the twelfth floor will need to go down to the first floor to clock out , to the fourth floor to find a smoking room , down to the first to clock on again and back to the twelfth to carry on working .
21 Bowe said : ‘ I thought he was crazy not to go down in the 10th when I was beating up on him .
22 Only the leading two candidates are entitled to go through to the second round .
23 In addition , the 16 teams to go through to the third round will each receive an illustrated copy of The Guinness Book of Cricket Facts and Feats .
24 just home from her studies at college in California , teamed up with Welsh junior champion Claire Bennett , also of Mold , to go through to the last four of the women 's doubles .
25 He only needed to make third to go through to the next round .
26 He now looks a good bet to go through to the next stage of the competition tomorrow .
27 And this is a ph , like a photocopy , so what you 'll have is a nice printed version with Abbey Life blue , purely for you to get a feel of if you like , , and in this , we 're very quickly going to go through on the first sheet it will have activity and production and it will have your data there .
28 whether they were in favour of going on to a second cycle of review and reporting and if so whether reports should deal only with a particular aspect of the school ;
29 As might be expected , how useful the process of review is in proposing changes , and the extent to which teachers favoured going on to a second round of the scheme are both significant , those thinking that it is very or fairly useful being slightly positive and those thinking it not very or not at all useful , being slightly negative .
30 Before going on to the second reason for Locke 's not acknowledging the existence of epistemic appearances I must correct a false impression I may have given , that all the seventeenth-century philosophers who succeeded Descartes toed the Cartesian line about the mind perceiving things by being causally affected by them .
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