Example sentences of "we [vb mod] go on [to-vb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 This in itself is a mildly interesting observation and certainly needs to be made ; but what we should go on to do is to say why they do not appear there .
2 Somehow I ca n't see us remaining in the number two position — but fingers crossed scumta will strike down our foes and inspire out team to greater things and we 'll go on to win the league .
3 We might go on to ask , then , why such a situation is , or is considered , exceptional .
4 We might go on to say that not only in the medieval period with its plainsong , but also today , the Church owes more to the prayer and music of the religious orders than it will ever appreciate .
5 From here we could go on to explore how the people in the castle manage without Melric .
6 We could go on to ask why they are n't common , which is another way of asking why the process of meiosis is normally fair , as scrupulously impartial as tossing a good penny .
7 He proposed an approach to the principled description of such contexts which bears a close resemblance to more recent descriptions which we shall go on to examine :
8 After a brief discussion of the first question , we shall go on to consider the present distribution of services within local government in the United Kingdom .
9 We will go on to create a Department of Legal Administration headed by a Minister in the Commons who will be responsible for all courts and tribunals in England and Wales .
10 In the next chapters we will go on to consider what homoeopathy is , how it arose and developed , and how it fits in with the scheme of health and disease outlined here .
11 We will go on to consider possibilities offered by different types of TV and film material you might have on video .
12 Although we will go on to think about what is commonly thought of as spiritual healing in a later section of this book , true healing is all around us .
13 But above all , we can trace each of these inferences to the facts that trigger them , namely , aspects of the form and juxtaposition of the utterances themselves , and we can go on to specify the regular principles that , given such aspects of utterances , produce the inferences in question .
14 ‘ I 'm really looking forward to linking up with David because I believe we can go on to become every bit as good as the partnership I had with Ian . ’
15 We can go on to observe that since the middle of the twentieth century there has been a big revival of informal street music , produced in non-literate , often amateur performance and through the public dissemination of recordings ( see Prato 1984 ) ; this has , of course , gone along with a wave of amateur music-making , centred on the guitar and on non-literate modes of production , whit h in the rock 'n' roll , ski Me and ‘ beat group ’ periods ( the late 1950s and the 1960s ) swept across the whole of Europe and North America .
16 From this we can go on to discover one of the rules for this sort of crime fiction .
  Next page