Example sentences of "[to-vb] along [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Also , the pressure on ministers to hustle along with the removal of lead may subside after a general election .
2 Some of the skinheads I 've met admit to having ‘ gone through ’ one or other of the parties of the extreme right , but , after a brief commitment , the enthusiasm tends to lapse along with the membership .
3 Slowly , I began to swim along under the castle walls .
4 Nicky Cruz and his gang , the Mau Maus , decide to go along for the ride … .
5 Darlington Council refused to go along with the plan but Miss Carter has revived the campaign this week as a planning application emerged wanting to put a food kiosk in the car park .
6 He found it hard enough to persuade senior officers to go along with the peace settlement .
7 While West Germany , for example , was willing to go along with the proposal ( but only if there was a joint system of ECSC subsidy financing ) , the net importers of coal within the Six — France , Italy and the Netherlands — were totally hostile to the notion of national contributions to a joint financing policy .
8 The CPP , which was happy to go along with the election , seems averse to the idea of losing it .
9 The subject is under strong social pressure to go along with the hypnotist ; he has agreed in good faith to be hypnotised , after all , and is determined to carry out the hypnotist 's suggestions .
10 She says she 's determined to go along with the system , so no one can say she bucked it .
11 So long as there is a need for collective decision-making and for policies which give direction to a whole community or society , and so long as or whenever unanimity can not be achieved , it is hard to see what alternative there can be to the minority being compelled to go along with the decision of the majority .
12 And their third album , which is actually untitled , should do even better now that they have notched up a few hit singles to go along with the hit album .
13 The growth of the economy — and the problems it caused — persuaded Japanese governments during the 1920s that it was in the country 's interest to go along with the internationalist trend .
14 Or as a laboratory supervisor , who was asked to go along with the manufacture of ‘ doctored ’ data so as to secure a contract deadline put it ( Vandivier 1972:22 ) :
15 I have argued elsewhere that Pound was prepared to take instruction , as well as to give it ; that when he first came to London in 1908 , he was looking for masters to whom he might apprentice himself ; that he found them in the Irishman W.B. Yeats and the maverick Englishman Ford Madox Ford ( whose professionalism about writing still denies him in England the recognition that he gets abroad ) ; and ( so I have speculated , though I know it can not be proved ) that Pound sought the same relationship with another Englishman , Laurence Binyon , who was too cagey to go along with the idea .
16 What I have always said is that way you set up supervision behind the programme is the most crucial , so therefore if I can sit down and help them to set up the most strenuous type of supervision to go along with the equipment , then they feel safe and the community feel safer that none of them will go out and commit another crime .
17 Mr Hussein seems ready , at this stage , to go along with the principle of democracy .
18 Lowered suspension kits give a more aggressive look and better sporting handling , while alloy wheels are also on sale to go along with the suspension system .
19 There could have even been a Spot the Architect competition to go along with the design competition .
20 ‘ I said you were crazy not to go along with the Corporation 's proposals , did n't I ?
21 They go with the will of the people and the will of the people is to go along with the President , I 've been in politics a long time .
22 Executives who commit corporate crime are not coerced into it , they do not necessarily have to go along with the advice or instructions of superiors .
23 Sjahrir was not prepared to cooperate ; the others decided to go along with the Japanese in order to extract concessions from them .
24 Revealing details of Iraq 's latest assurances delivered on March 20 , Rolf Ekeus , head of the joint UN and International Atomic Energy Agency ( IAEA ) special commission on Iraq , told a press conference in New York the same day that his commission was " satisfied there are undertakings that the Iraqis are willing to go along with the destruction [ of ] capabilities " which they had not previously agreed to destroy .
25 The USA had previously been opposed to such involuntary repatriation , as had the Vietnamese government , but the latter was expected to go along with the initiative , given its current desire to restore diplomatic relations with the USA .
26 And herself , mistrustful of him , angered by his wrong assumptions about her , pretending to go along with the programme he 'd arranged !
27 He decided to go along with the frivolity .
28 ‘ The residents are all going to oppose this , and a lot of them are planning to go along on the day of the appeal , ’ she said .
29 He 'd been shaken , certainly , when Cedric Downes had invited him to go along to the North Oxford Golf Club and knock up the caretaker if necessary .
30 ‘ You must excuse me — I promised to go along to the tennis courts .
  Next page