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

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1 I think we must make it a positive step forward that this council not only goes forwards to build but it goes forward to use that building and give the firemen of this county the right tools , or firewoman , the firemen and the firewoman of this county the right tools to work with .
2 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 .
3 It goes on to recommend that role modelling should itself be the subject of teaching so that its functions may become more explicit and better recognised .
4 It goes on to list some of the tips to be found in a book ( price £12.95 ) of the same title — techniques which will apparently enable you to become ‘ more popular , more confident , more successful and happier in life ’ .
5 It went on to give possible aims and objectives for the curriculum , but in the spirit of showing the process of curriculum appraisal that HMI , and the participating LEAs , hope will be attempted by schools .
6 It went on to highlight another 66 reports from various parts of the world of serious reactions to the drug .
7 It went on to sell four million copies around the world , the lion 's share , it was noted with some satisfaction within Virgin , in territories where Virgin had their own label .
8 And it went on to enjoy sporadic mail and fare-payers use before being put into regular use six years later to bolster lightly loaded services serving this most rural of communities .
9 But it went on to slam British Rail for using ancient commuter trains with parts dating back to the steam age .
10 But the new bloke sent it back to me and it went on to win six races , and I felt so sick for the lads .
11 Its programme called for tax cuts , reduced immigration , and the abolition of traffic wardens and was not taken seriously by many observers , although it went on to win parliamentary representation in the September 1991 general election [ see p. 38444 ] .
12 It went on to make two historic recommendations : that the Institution should give more overt support to the Society of Surveying Technicians , formed in 1970 by the General Council of the RICS , pointing out that the notion that the profession needed persons with technical qualification to ‘ come in at the bottom ’ and stay there was insensitive to human aspirations and naïve in its recognition of the Society 's worth ; and that practitioners should henceforth be required to undertake structured Continuing Professional Development ( CPD ) — a courageous and necessary proposal ( see below ) .
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