Example sentences of "[adv] go [adv prt] to [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I think I 'd better go on to Granny Fordham 's .
2 Well er watch how you go you 'd better go back to bed now I suppose .
3 " Better go back to Nildro-hain .
4 Ooh , I 'd better go back to work had n't I ?
5 Oh , then I can just go up to Co-Op
6 Hey , thanks for trying , but maybe I 'll just go back to bed with my cocoa and my Simply Red CD , if you do n't mind awfully .
7 She wished she could just go back to bed and start the day all over again , only somehow making it turn out completely normal this time .
8 He was however er reasonably clear as to the speed at which local authorities tend to deal with these matters , he said that it always takes a long time and getting any answer out of the local authority might well take somewhere between six months and up to two years , he thought that perhaps eighteen months was a reasonable guess before he would actually manage to get somebody if Paul were to move as er , it maybe well occur to here or a different local authority then of course the application would just go back to square one and that would lead to more delay .
9 never had binding , never had binding court agreements because mothers could always go back to court and say this fifteen pounds is n't enough .
10 Given those two improvements — together with child benefit , one-parent benefit and housing benefit — many women in my hon. Friend 's constituency will find that they have enough financial room for manoeuvre , so that they can both go out to work and meet their childcare costs .
11 If she had n't arranged to take Sandra to the doctor 's Marjorie would probably go back to bed herself , now , with a cup of tea and the Daily Mail .
12 We 'll now go on to correspondence then Pat please .
13 We can now go on to look at two very different institutions , one socially acceptable , the other not , in order to see the extent to which they allow the expression of distress through tears .
14 We could now go on to attempt to explain the character of these institutions by citing their effect on leading capitalists — they are as they are partly because they encourage a belief which is functional in relation to the system as a whole .
15 Research shows that fire bells induce panic and confusion or , even worse , people ignore them and wait for the PA announcement to say that the bells were a false alarm and everybody can now go back to bed .
16 At fifteen , when I could legally go out to work , I got a Saturday job which paid for my clothes ( except my school uniform , which was part of the deal , somehow ) .
17 ‘ I 'd rather go back to work , ’ said Sarah .
18 ‘ Or would you rather go back to Water Gypsy and lie down ? ’
19 She experienced changeable moods and panic attacks — she had n't been on holiday for 20 years and could n't even go out to dinner for fear of not being able to get away .
20 Some may even go back to mother for comfort , but that can be a double-edged solution .
21 Minus one minus three does n't even go down to minus two .
22 ‘ Will you please go along to Room G and see what 's keeping them ?
23 Another would sometimes go back to work er if their son or dau well mainly the sons went to university and they needed the extra money for that .
24 I will then go on to present some examples of language in use in conversation , to show how these attitudes relate to actual practice .
25 If we accept Jakobson 's and Hymes ' , or any similar , categorization of language into a small number of macro-functions , we might then go on to subdivide each function and specify more delicate categories , or microfunctions .
26 I ca n't stand going in a , you see , that 's one of things I would never go out to dos for cos I
27 Clare was devastated and swore that she would never go back to school again .
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