Example sentences of "[noun sg] to go to [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I made a last minute decision to go to this game . |
2 | So there 's no need to go to great expense of printed what have you . |
3 | ‘ I 'll baby-sit the kids , ’ Carole insisted over Laura 's blushing and increasingly desperate protests that there was no need to go to such trouble . |
4 | Well we do n't want no all we want is one so that at the end we want from each group to go to another group to be marked . |
5 | He and Mother must have thought a great deal of the place to go to that expense at a time when money was so short . |
6 | look , look , I , I , I 've got to go because I 've got another meeting to go to this evening , erm , what , what I , er what we need to do is to get this laid out clearly as to what our projections ar are |
7 | This thick tash must be accompanied by a large cigar and the refusal to go to any club that would have you as a member • Nabisco takes over disco as this year 's club theme . |
8 | They will not have the right to go to Industrial Tribunal for legal redress . |
9 | I was required every day to go to another place and put cards coloured like the cooked liver of a duck into alphabetical order . |
10 | ‘ We were in a no-win situation and when I was offered the chance to go to another team I took it . |
11 | Activists in Haringey persuaded the council to suspend their commitment to go to full committee status , because a sub-committee could have a majority of non-councillors ; this would facilitate greater participation by members of the lesbian and gay communities , particularly those who were black , disabled or unemployed . |
12 | It is that there is an obligation to go to Catholic school … |
13 | Recent decisions as to whether to grant leave to go to judicial review , and High Court determinations , suggest that much hinges on the court 's interpretation of statutory duties and points of law . |
14 | One day , soon after he arrived in the dale he had reason to go to another farm and overheard a conversation between two old ladies.p They were lamenting that it was a sad day because outsiders were coming into the dale and taking over farms and was n't it a shame they could n't be let to locals . ’ |
15 | It was a wedding breakfast in the true sense , the foods breaking the fast we observed in order to go to Holy Communion during the nuptial Mass . |
16 | From conversations , it appeared that they were not against education per se ; in fact a number of them had left school to go to further education . |