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

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1 And he goes on gazing out of the window .
2 He becomes crucially aware that they have little need of any critical analysis , for as Benyon ( ibid. 23 ) goes on to point out ,
3 The circular goes on to point out that the list is not exhaustive and suggests other courses may be appropriate .
4 Hobhouse goes on to point out that although instinct is a
5 Norfolk goes on to point out that people who go jogging in the city for half an hour can absorb the , equivalent of 10 to 20 cigarettes ' worth of carbon monoxide ( ‘ Jogging is completely unnecessary , ’ according to cardiologist George Sheenan , who wrote one of the early jogging handbooks , Running And Being .
6 As Webster goes on to point out , when study of the cuneiform records revealed that the Babylonian shabbatum ( full-moon day ) also fell on the fourteenth ( or fifteenth ) day of the month , we were presented with another survival of what must have been the primary meaning of the Hebrew term shabbath .
7 A LETTER reproves me for singling out rotten spelling in other places , notably The Guardian , and goes on to point out that this magazine is not immune .
8 Having said this , however , Kiefer goes on to point out that the masculine ideal of violent pride is in tension with the religious ideal of revenge as being God 's prerogative .
9 Isabelle Jan surmised that the lack of ‘ the essential emotional outlet of erotic passion ’ in children 's literature led to ‘ more or less disguised and distorted substitutes for adult love ’ but goes on to point out that passionate feeling can be , and is , expressed strongly in family relationships .
10 She goes on to point out that " Nothing was more alien to the baroque than a puritanical attitude towards technique and material .
11 However , as Taylor goes on to point out , there are cogent and even forbidding explanations for the apparent neglect .
12 He goes on to point out that words like ‘ comfort ’ and ‘ home ’ are peculiar to the English language , so that the benighted French are driven to borrow confortable , since de la maison and chez nous relate merely to eating and sleeping places .
13 As he goes on to point out , the contention may not always be relied on .
14 It is to some extent modelled on the supposed ‘ Obrecht ’ Passion , which he mentions in his preface , though his text is entirely from St. John and he goes on to point out that he has been ‘ diligent so to set the words under the notes that almost every syllable has its note , and the four voices sing the words at the same time so that the listeners may hear the words clearly ’ .
15 As the paper goes on to point out : ‘ The availability of substantial permitted reserves and the effect this could have on implementation in the case of Option II [ on which MPG6 is based ] needs to be considered . ’
16 As the paper goes on to point out : ‘ The availability of substantial permitted reserves and the effect this could have on implementation in the case of Option II [ on which MPG6 is based ] needs to be considered . ’
17 But the degree to which we can control our environment is often determined by others as Morgan goes on to point out : " We all construct or shape our realities but not necessarily under circumstances of our own choosing " ( p. 140 ) .
18 He goes on to say of course federal laws were not being obeyed in the confederacy because they 'd rejected the entire panoply of federal laws and Lincoln goes on to point out must they these laws and the confederacy be allowed to state the question more directly , are all the laws but one to go unexecuted and the government itself to go to pieces less that one be violated .
19 He goes on to point out that the Germans had standing by three squadrons of heavy ‘ C-Machines ’ , seventy-two in number , each capable of dropping a 200Ib. bomb , which could reach their targets after half an hour 's flying .
20 It replicates itself , and each new copy , which is independent of the original , goes on to carry out the task for which the virus was designed .
21 But Fodor goes on to argue that much of what can be said about reflexes can also be said about processes which we would normally regard as ‘ cognitive ’ rather than ‘ neurological ’ or ‘ behavioural ’ : the parsing of heard sentences , for example .
22 I believe that a Christian 's position on this matter recognises the necessity for state action but goes on to argue that much of education , health and other welfare services could be quite adequately provided through the private sector , with the result that people would be free to exercise greater freedom of choice and also exercise greater responsibility over their lives .
23 then he goes on to explain why
24 Brutus starts off this passage with a rhetorical question , and then goes on to explain why he killed Caesar , including all Caesar 's good aspects .
25 It goes on to explain how audiovisual media , and video in particular , can be used to help bring about a process of change in people 's lives .
26 ‘ It goes on to explain how the geneticists and the neurochemists — neurotransmitters and all that — are in on the act = ’ His red eyes searched mine once more , then turned away to stare at the solitary lamp .
27 Paul said have no anxiety about anything , but he did n't stop there , he goes on to explain how to rid our lives of anxiety .
28 The plan goes on to set out points made in a social work committee report submitted in 1975 , dealing with the likely effects of the arrival of a large number of permanent immigrants .
29 It then goes on to describe how he joined the Roux brothers in London and finally opened his own restaurant in Chelsea .
30 Kant then goes on to describe how Leibniz ( 1646–1716 ) , the great polymath , carried out field observations of caterpillars and similar creatures , being careful afterwards to return them to a suitable leaf out of harm 's way , ‘ so that it should not come to harm through any act of his .
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