Example sentences of "[not/n't] [verb] to go [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You 'd have to signal in advance which issues you regarded as a matter of confidence — for instance , the Tories might have a crack at coal privatisation but might not want to go to the country on it if they failed . ’
2 She did not want to go to the beach because the beach meant the bikini , and spending all afternoon sucking in her gut and wondering why her skin went straight from fishbelly white to lobster red while all the other kids had golden tans .
3 If you do not want to go to the police , ring Sunday Life on Belfast 331133 ext 4316 and your message will be passed on to the McDermotts .
4 I did not want to go into the dark house , where I would spend the evening quietly with old Mrs Fairfax .
5 Observers see the Royal couple no longer enjoy each other 's company and reports reveal Diana did not want to go on the trip .
6 At first Lindy did not want to go over the wall .
7 As soon as the redundancies were announced , just over half of those who retired before the pension age decided that they did not want to go through the process of trying to find work .
8 The work can be at various levels from initial reconnaissance to diamond drilling but is not intended to go beyond the discovery stage of a mineral deposit .
9 He spent the entire morning with his legs crossed , not daring to go to the loo in case one of his colleagues was in there at the same time and came to the wrong conclusion . ’
10 So she did not need to go on the offensive and was not required to fight .
11 No you do not need to go in the shower .
12 Why did lads like Trevor Williamson not want to go to the Oval ?
13 Consider someone deciding not to try to go to the theatre .
14 The children were allowed no breakfast , the younger two were not permitted to go to the bathroom , and none of them was allowed to take a single personal possession , not even a teddy bear or something to be a link with home .
15 Adam knelt beside her , thinking of Zosie and Zosie 's mother and stepfather who had not bothered to go to the police when their daughter unaccountably vanished .
16 ( ‘ We are not going to go to the wall for Escort and Parade ’ , an ‘ associate ’ of Roy Hattersley told The Observer , 6th May 1990 . )
17 I actually got the impression that erm I mean I 'm not going to go over the , the points that
18 And look at us now would youse — look at this place now — Sean and Michael live like kings — whatever they might say — and I 'm not going to go into the whys and wherefores here . ’
19 I 'm not going to go into the dream thing with Cal , or say anything about Vern 's dad .
20 This is not a book about dieting , so I am not going to go into the subject in great depth .
21 I 'm not going to go through the erm , passage at the bottom , but I 'd like you to have a go at it and will go over it on Friday .
22 ‘ They 're not going to go along the track looking for a rope until both the Canadian and the freight train have been through .
23 ‘ … the innocent party is not bound to go on the market and buy or sell at the date of the breach .
24 Elaine 's voice was concerned but deep inside she hoped he would not decide to go to the party .
25 He hoped he would not have to go during the night .
26 Fortunately , the researcher does not have to go through the bound volumes one by one to see what they contain .
27 The difference between this and the two previous outcomes is that under this procedure the agency does not have to go through the whole decision-making process again .
28 If the local authority knows that it wishes to privatise and not use local authority employees at all , it does not have to go through the compulsory tender procedure .
29 However , we shall be satisfied only when no more such arrests are made , so that we do not have to go through the same business all over again .
30 First , as we wish to encourage carers and strengthen families — even the extended family — if a person who is caring for someone loses them to a home , the person 's home should not have to go on the market to meet the cost of fees .
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