Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] to go [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The power lead from the transformer has to go to the keyboard first and a short lead from here connects to the PCB .
2 The High Court in Glasgow heard that as the car started to go over the top of the steps , one of the youths pushing it shouted : ‘ There 's somebody down there . ’
3 The planned destruction of so much of Romania 's rural heritage seemed to go against the tenor of Ceauşescu 's out-spoken nationalism .
4 NME ca n't claim to be the first off the blocks with coverage of this splenetic musical bastard — that honour has to go to the now sadly defunct Sounds .
5 Our greatest joy is that the twenty-one-year-old wants to go into the car industry . ’
6 He accepts that every Special Constable has to go through the process of gaining the confidence of his regular colleagues .
7 What happens here is that if a white lady wants to go to the toilet and she 's working on a line , she does n't ask anyone 's permission , she just gets up — out she goes , powders her nose , has a cigarette , whatever they do — then comes back .
8 Q Will their separation have to go through the courts ?
9 The constable started to go round the car , examining it minutely occasionally glancing up at the WPC to confirm the impression he was making .
10 If a committee wishes to go beyond the scrutiny of administration and to challenge the basis of policy , then it is time for a minister to come and argue in favour of the policy under review .
11 Not all waste has to go into the dustbin .
12 Sometimes Sweetheart had to go into the back room to buy something special .
13 All of our group wanted to go to the 2ème Régiment Étranger de Parachutistes , and I decided I wanted to be a high-altitude free-fall parachutist .
14 In addition , the occupational therapist needs to go into the appropriate scheme for the disabled person to ensure that the work is right for his or her requirements .
15 J. Marshall , Tanners Hill Cottage , Crook : I was standing on the steps of Durham Crown Court waiting to go in the public gallery , the assizes were on .
16 The kitten had to go to the vet three times in as many weeks and was more expensive than the baby .
17 A Volvo spokesman last night refused to go into the reasons behind the deal .
18 Therapy ? 's latest game is ‘ Whose Round Is It Anyway ? ’ in which contestants from the band and crew have to go to the bar and order a drink in the manner of a named personality .
19 It comes about that the merchant has to go to the fair at Bruges on his business , and while he spends part of a day before departure in his counting-house reviewing his affairs the monk meets and converses with the wife .
20 Flexibility may need redefining , if armies are going to combine smallness with the punch needed to go on the offensive against countries like Iraq equipped with lots of state-of-the-art T-72 tanks .
21 On her return from Whitehaven she had surprised herself by feeling compelled to go to the room where the four of them had enjoyed the dinner .
22 In fact , if every Briton decided to go to the seaside on the same day there would be only four inches of sand per person !
23 The latest proposals coincided with yet another summer of delays as tourist traffic queued to go over the sea to Skye .
24 Part-way through entering the sale on a computer , the sales assistant had to go into the store room to check the identifying number of the machine selected .
25 So , you see , it 's no use trying to go over the agent 's head . ’
26 Er taking off and sending telegrams , you see , erm then I was told that the Railway Company wer were taking girls on again , so I applied and I had to go to Ipswich to pass two more exams , you see , and er and started work and the in the Catering Manager 's office at Ipswich Station as , as a clerk doing typing and general office work as the Manager had to go on the district .
27 But the central and critical point is that the sexual gavotte tended to go with the theatre like pinstripes and a bowler ( then ) went with the City .
28 In his book Rest Days Hutton Webster has drawn attention to the passage in 2 Kings 4 : 23 , describing how , when the Shunammite woman wanted to go to the prophet Elijah to beg him for her son 's life to be restored , her husband objected , saying ‘ Wherefore wilt thou go to him today ?
29 This means that leaders and government have to be accessible to the people ; and , given the great gulf that has opened up between them in so many modern societies , this probably means that the government has to go to the people , rather than expecting the people to come to it .
30 ‘ The dart has to go into the haunch , and that 's important .
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