Example sentences of "it go [adv] [to-vb] [that] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It goes on to say that ‘ permission should be granted unless there are convincing objections such as intrusion into open countryside , noise , smell , safety , health or excessive traffic generation ’ .
2 It goes on to say that they 're designated for marine use .
3 It goes on to say that , coupled with the large safety margin involved , it is ‘ extremely unlikely that anyone is being harmed by current levels of dioxins in the environment . ’
4 Now it goes on to say that they need to get the middle peasants to join and to go out and do more explanatory work among them .
5 It goes on to state that the cell had no electricity and no floor covering , the prisoners were allowed few clothes and they received only two meals a day , one consisting of a single very small momo ( steamed bun ) and the other of a small cup of wormy vegetables .
6 The London Society implicitly recognises this when it goes on to argue that a DG would allow the president 's post to become part-time , thereby allowing the senior partner of a major practice to take it on .
7 It goes on to argue that scientists do not know enough about natural fluctuations in fish populations in the wild to be able to advise on how many can safely be taken at any time .
8 Stating that clinics should have a close relationship with general out-patient departments , it goes on to suggest that , where ground-floor accommodation is unavailable , consideration should be given to allocating space at first-floor level , commenting , with rare insight , that this possibility arises because almost all the patients visiting the clinic will be ambulant .
9 It went on to claim that ISC was a ‘ highly cash-absorptive operation ’ .
10 Nevertheless , it went on to argue that a higher age of consent was necessary to protect the young from ‘ attentions and pressures of an undesirable kind ’ .
11 This demonstrated that I was not yet a legionnaire as I had not been awarded my white képi , and as such was still an ‘ engagé volontaire ’ or recruit ; it went on to say that I had one month 's service in the Legion , and that I was part of the Squadron commanded by Capitaine Duransoy , in the section of Sergeant Major Barlerin of the 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment .
12 It described how there had been a fifty percent increase in food poisoning cases in district year and then it went on to say that it , it was largely , it was thought that that increase was largely because of the increased publicity which the council had been given hygiene training , and saying how many people had been trained , and how the Health Committee was being asked to provide more resources so there could more courses even , even more courses in the following year .
13 It went on to explain that when war broke out many country gentlemen , as well as the burgesses of a number of cities and towns , chose to serve the King not by joining his armies in the field , but by pulling up their drawbridges , slamming their gates , and challenging the enemy to contest the issue .
14 It went on to note that many of the most effective schemes had come about through the voluntary sector as a result of individual enterprise or a one person crusade — not as a logical outcome of a strategic planning process .
15 This Reformed or Calvinist doctrine of grace and salvation was clearly reflected in Cranmer 's Forty-Two Articles of Faith issued in 1553 ; Article Seventeen in particular declared : ‘ predestination to life is the everlasting purpose of God ’ , and it went on to imply that individual salvation and damnation had been decreed at the beginning of creation , even before the Fall of Adam and Eve .
16 It went on to add that ‘ the effect of taxation ( if properly understood ) is unlikely to sway a decision to emigrate . ’
  Next page