Example sentences of "[noun pl] [modal v] go [adv] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Not many heads would go as far as one who insists that male members of staff must wear their jackets in classrooms even on the warmest of days .
2 A potential danger is that the trend away from the identification and analysis of planation surfaces could go too far so that insufficient attention is accorded to these remnants in the landscapes of areas dominated by formerly extensive landsurfaces .
3 Whereas the inexperienced glider pilot needs to fly at least once a month to be safe , more experienced pilots can go much longer without always becoming badly out of practice .
4 Had he been afraid that things might go too far ?
5 He says his customers would go further afield only if discounting was ferocious , and in such an event believes that prices would soon start going back up as one or more of the big chains went out of business .
6 PRIVATISATION of the Crown Suppliers will go ahead quickly once Parliament has passed the enabling bill which received its second reading yesterday , the Environment Secretary , Mr Chris Patten , told the Commons yesterday .
7 If the theory is correct , trials involving HIV infected patients could go ahead as early as next year .
8 Rabbits can go fast uphill .
9 No room was left for the sort of ‘ campaigning ’ witnessed on the campuses , so that in future the procedures could go ahead smoothly under the party 's oversight .
10 Planning meals would go so much easier . ’
11 Ferguson added : ‘ I have no preconception about which particular strikers will go best together , and have n't given it a lot of thought yet .
12 We have , therefore , to consider why marriages effectively end , as well as why couples will go as far as to go to the courts to legally separate , and what social factors underlie the responses to changes in legislation .
13 Unfortunately , many students begin a piece by trying to think of melody and accompaniment together , and after a few bars can go no further .
14 Robert Bakewell ( 1725–95 ) , experimenting with sheep and cattle-breeding on his farm in north Leicestershire , was convinced that ‘ fifty acres of pasture ground divided into five enclosures will go as far in grazing cattle as sixty acres all in one piece ’ and his opinion was shared by other big graziers .
15 The English Courts can go no further , in the absence of a Bill of Rights " incorporating " the Convention into English law , than to apply it when interpreting ambiguous statutes , on the presumption that Parliament must intend to legislate in a manner consistent with the United Kingdom 's treaty obligations .
16 But yesterday organiers decided competitors could go as fast as they like .
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