Example sentences of "go at [art] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 A couple of men rounded the plantation , going at a run towards the lake .
2 Like the stately swan gliding serenely over the water , few suspect that under the surface the legs and feet are going at a rate of knots , with the result that the following items are in the pipeline , if not already attended to : —
3 The creative ferment set going at the beginning of the decade had petered out , as directors like Reisz and Richardson lost their sense of direction .
4 ‘ And I 'd like to make the money myself , I mean , I could , easily , at the Quindale garage , but I have n't time because of A levels and the others are all going at the beginning of July . ’
5 If anguish is too great , an elder may simply cease to discuss loss and just keep going at the level of practical consciousness .
6 Depends on how you 're going at the drive at .
7 Cecil Moores has passed on , but John is still going at the age of 96 .
8 This has no more to do with Christ and regenerative suffering than Dr Rutenspitz telling Mr Golyadkin that Licht will be provided for him where he 's going at the end of The Double .
9 But instead of going at the end of the process of building the new Europe , the Wall has gone at the beginning .
10 As many of you will know , we are going at the end of January , with the programme , to Australia , to be broadcasting live from Sydney for a whole week to mark Australia Day .
11 Only the Abdication had prevented Baldwin from going at the end of 1936 .
12 All out 446 meant that England had a lot of batting to do in the last two days , and when Larkins went at the end of the third day to a ball that he did not see in the shadows , one felt they just were not going to make it .
13 As soon as the bell went at the end of last lesson that morning I raced out of school .
14 You can only go in the future direction in time , but you can go at a bit of an angle to it .
15 Losses below the line have jumped to over £80m in the last year and in order to add ballast to the balance sheet the group may ultimately be forced to let its prized assets go at a knock down price if the recession continues .
16 The interview should go at the pace of the adult and not the child .
17 Unlike so many hotel kitchens , which are completely enclosed , La Rive 's has the unusual feature of being surrounded by windows , with a door on to a magnificent herb garden , where guests can only go at the invitation of the chef .
18 It only added to the team Renault-Williams ' total embarrassment at carelessly letting him go at the peak of his box office appeal and pulling power .
19 Surely they could n't just let her go at the end of the three years ?
20 But with the change of rules meaning Warwickshire have to let one of them go at the end of the season , which one will it be ?
21 They must go at the break of day , you know ?
22 FLASHY drivers are expected to bid more than £2,000 for the registration number 123 GO at an auction in Edinburgh next month .
23 I 've never found that a congenial notion ; it seemed to me that there were ways to be quite contemporary and yet go at the art in a fashion that would allow you to tell complicated stories simply for the aesthetic pleasure of complexity of complication and unravelment , suspense , and the rest .
24 If I go at the end of the season , then I will have done my best , and can hold my head high . ’
25 Draw up a life table for a cohort of 5000 students showing , for each year of study , the probability of leaving and the expected remaining stay calculated on the assumption that one-tenth of the leavers in any year depart at random times during the year and the remainder go at the end of that year .
26 ‘ 'You 're to go at the beginning of January , but I shall have to wait till all this house business is finished .
27 The $489m loss for 1992 means that another 10,000 to 15,000 more jobs are going to have to go at the company as part of the continuing restructuring plan — its payroll actually rose to 252,000 at the end of 1992 from 240,000 in 1991 .
28 Three hundred and fifty jobs are to go at the headquarters of the credit card company Barclaycard .
29 We 're now hoping to go at the end of the month . ’
30 The tank had to go at the end of the little landing .
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