Example sentences of "they [vb mod] go [prep] the " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 They must go at the break of day , you know ?
2 Repatriation was not the concern of the embassy , they must go to the British Consulate , a little distance away on the other side of the Brandenburg Gate .
3 They should go to the Royal Bank of Scotland , which has a branch in Head Street , Colchester , and fill out a pay slip for account number 11386303 , quoting their team reference number .
4 They 'll go into the next release of Motif .
5 They 'll go above the metal fence
6 Liberty warn they 'll go to the European Court to protect the rights of Travellers .
7 If I meet a new act , I always try and assess their maturity in order to judge whether they might go off the deep end as soon as they have success .
8 Well I say again , I thought they might go with the children .
9 But you must ask the person , do n't put just somebody 's name down , thinking they might go on the committee , erm , you must ask them first before you put their name on the list .
10 There was a number of men who had passed for Sergeant 's rank , and the only way they could get it was to report another policeman so they could go to the chief constable on a discipline charge .
11 All went well until 1985 , when museum purchase grants were frozen at the level at which they have remained , the reasoning being that for anything really important , they could go to the NHMF .
12 For the past 27 years , if they needed help or advice , they could go to the Racial Equality Council centre in Gloucester .
13 But they 're worried that if they turn it down they could go to the bottom of the housing list .
14 Once Barry 's Mum had brought Barry with her and Mr Field , the dentist , had said they could go into the garden at the back .
15 They could go into the chapel , and the Adam library , and the red drawing-room , and with a bit of luck they 'd be so busy looking at the Chippendale and the Hepplewhite they would n't notice the holes in the rugs . ’
16 They did n't feel for example they could go into the advice centre , they did n't feel it was for them .
17 It was all right for men , they could go over the side .
18 Oh it was a horse-drawn , horse-drawn , there were no cars on the road in those days , I think I was one of the earliest to get knocked down by a car actually in Walsall , I was er , when we lived in Street he came down Street and immediately opposite there was a Co-op shop opposite Birds the fruitiers , and mother sent me down to the Co-op and the old trams used to run along the Pleck to Darlaston , Wednesbury and that way on and I ran across the road , past the Co-op the tram and a car must have just bumped into me and he knocked me down , a terrible commotion amongst the folks and could n't have hurt them much , because I got up and ran off , ran off home , so they were restricted in you see and the speed they could go in the car , but the car , the tram car was stopped at the bottom of Street , almost opposite the Co-op and er I must have just run across the road run into the car and more or less bounced off it I should think .
19 When the ship was swinging round , they 'd go down the river , th that here rope was still on the bollard so to throw it off
20 He 'd send them then , he every dock was numbered from one to hundred and thirty and he 'd say righto , number one so and so , number five so and so and of course when they come back to the pool , they 'd go on the end of the rota .
21 There was very little social life on board , but when you come home to Lowestoft , they 'd go to the Suffolk , and treat one another , or to the Stone jug , a little farther up the road .
22 No they 'd go to the Pool Manager .
23 Well , pretty fair , because then they used to go down Botterman 's Bay and where they used to er , the dock was in the hold , that was all loose grain and they used to put four bushels to the , so they used a bushel skip like that , wh which was a wooden one with a handle each side and they 'd go into the wheat
24 No , they 'd go into the mid one would n't they ?
25 And you knew what they were thinking , they were trying to weigh up whether they dare go across the stepping stones and you could tell by their faces and what they did of course when they decided no it was beyond them and they 'd play safe and they 'd go back the same way .
26 Direct , the same as erm fertiliser coming in , a lot of lorries would come down there and get the fertiliser , different say merchants , different farmers , they used to go through the agent and they 'd buy so much off the agent , this different fertiliser if could n't supply it , what they wanted .
27 For used to go over the road and they used to go over the railway .
28 Well first of all I 'd go down Street and up Street West and up to the top of Street and there was some puddling furnaces , the new side iron works and I 'd watch those men they 'd produce wrought iron and during the process the metal boils up and I 'd have to get a big rubbling bar and rubble they 'd call rubble into a ball , there 's a little wagon put underneath the put under the wagon and off he goes to the steam hammer , now I used to be fascinated with this and Saturday after Saturday I used to go up there and watch one of the heats and as soon as they 'd finished doing they used to go into the Forge and Hammer for a drink , I mean it was such hard work so they 'd do a heat go up the Forge and Iron and come back and then do another heat when I 'd
29 And they used to go and er th odd ones er and they used to go to the houses in the street , there were a chap er down th er that street opposite the er er the every morning .
30 No they used to go to the .
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