Example sentences of "go [verb] it [adv] " in BNC.

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1 She goes though , he 's not having a party so , he 's invited thirty-five kids and , and they 're all bringing their own friends , there 's not gon na be enough room , he goes forget it then , I wo n't have the party .
2 ‘ Ent you goin' to answer it then ? ’ said Tom .
3 And on all those issues I think the industry itself has pulled itself up and through the National Tourist Boards we are going to promote it very hard indeed over the four week period .
4 ‘ I think I 'm going to like it there .
5 ‘ I 'm going to go it alone .
6 I always enjoy Christmas but I 'm going to enjoy it even more this year .
7 ‘ I felt overawed just looking around Old Trafford — but I 'm going to enjoy it here . ’
8 The herring looked delicious but he was n't at all sure he was going to enjoy it as much as he 'd thought .
9 I am though , said May , and I 'm going to drive it everywhere .
10 " Well , " I said , " could I ask who 's going to drive it then ? "
11 Then you follow me and hit me with a driver and drop away quickly because I 'm going to hit it so fast he wo n't know where the ball is until it 's down the fairway . ’
12 Are you going to wear it tonight ?
13 No one has done it before and no idiot is going to try it again .
14 it was the cream of the milk , well you used to like it , well sort of , some people make it with water , that 's why I made it all milk , are you going to try it again with water ? and just a drop of milk on top
15 Perhaps he was going to punch it straight back at the batsman .
16 As with so many economic megabooks , British readers are going to find it heavily skewed towards the US , which is particularly galling when it comes to the advice preparing for the slump .
17 So , for the moment , if you want a higher resolution page printer it really is a case of going to find it rather than having it thrust at you .
18 He was going to find it rather difficult to talk for a few days , Kathleen realised .
19 ‘ I 've got part-time players and three or four are going to find it extremely difficult to get time off work .
20 I 'd have thought he 's going to find it extremely difficult down here to find a job .
21 You ai n't going to overdo it today , my girl .
22 She had been going to set it loose in case it got too tame to fend for itself .
23 No , no , but I think that the present producer has seen it 's potential and is going to explore it much more fully .
24 It had made the Marchese a small fortune when he sold it to the deputy of the English connoisseur in Naples who was going to ship it away in boxes ; it was being stripped from the walls when the Government heard of it and came and sealed up the villa again , but not before one of the intermediaries had sliced enough off the top of the deal to pay his passage to America , promising to send after him for his family .
25 In the method described previously , the analyst tries to select sentences ( or passages of some other size ) whose meaning is fairly ‘ neutral ’ from the emotional point of view , and will tend to avoid material such as ‘ Why do n't you leave me alone ? ’ or ‘ How can I ever thank you enough ? ’ because the lexical meaning of the words used already makes the speaker 's attitude pretty clear , whereas sentences such as ‘ She 's going to buy it tomorrow ’ or ‘ The paper has fallen under the table ’ are less likely to prejudice the listener .
26 I 'm going to fit it neatly into the neck of the one of the bottles .
27 now are you having marmalade , I 'm going to fetch it now
28 care because I 'm going to differentiate it now because differentiating is a lot easier than integrating .
29 And you are going to hear it again : ’ If ’ Government ’ borrowing takes the strain , taxes — not just our taxes but the next generation 's too — have to go up . ’
30 No , it 's alright , you 're going get it now .
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