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

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1 It 's fun ambling among the dripping-wet mountains of cod and mullet ( or rabbits and pheasants during the hunting season ) , but the serious eating goes on elsewhere in town .
2 Political change of some kind goes on continuously in every society , in response to a variety of changing internal and external conditions , which include the relation to nature and to other societies , the interaction of groups within each society , and the unceasing circulation of personnel through the disappearance of older generations and the rise of new ones .
3 Walk on round to those cliffs and you come to what seem like utterly derelict sheds hanging on the edge of the precipice , stinking of goat : these are stacked with piles of skins for tanning , which goes on below in Brobdingnagian wooden barrels and enormous concrete troughs .
4 US authorities allege that Gen Noriega made millions in illegal profits by allowing drug trafficking to go on freely in Panama .
5 Although they do lie outside the mainstream — indeed , because they lie outside it — authors such as B. S. Johnson have at the very least an important exemplary function , keeping open a wide spectrum of possibility , even for authors who may not always wish to go so far in such radical directions themselves .
6 And then he goes down again in secret on the Saturday in the Datsun .
7 But Mr de Soto goes down well in Washington , where he has helped persuade the authorities to take the previously unknown Mr Fujimori seriously .
8 Earl Grey never goes down well in a boys ' school — there 's that touch of Milady 's Boudoir about it .
9 You 're allowed very little of your own stuff down there , just a set of clothes , but it all goes down just in case you do n't return to your house .
10 Overall Engels seems to go much further in this enthusiasm for Morgan than the generally vague impression we get from Marx .
11 We went about a mile before they tired of the effort involved , and I did n't mean to go much further in any case because according to the map I had in my pocket we were by then in about the centre of the western spur of the Quillersedge woods .
12 We had to go down there in 1969 following the snake which ate Denke 's little girl .
13 ‘ The time it goes over once in a lifetime — and you 're a criminal .
14 The condition can last for months , but it goes away completely in time .
15 The colonists had enough newspapers to take any visiting Englishman aback , and were developing industries fast enough to disturb the balance of the integrated commercial system : in 1699 Americans were forbidden to spin woollens for export , even to another colony ; in 1732 a similar limitation was placed on the manufacture of hats and caps ; and in 1750 the Iron Act allowed them to smelt iron ore into pig iron but forbade them to go any further in processing it , though in the event the American colonies were producing more iron and steel than Britain by 1775 .
16 As human populations increased villagers had to go further afield in search of food .
17 Caresses can keep you warm — even hot — but heating goes off everywhere in the small hours .
18 ‘ And last night , ’ Rainbow continues , ‘ at the disco , she told me she had to go off somewhere in a hurry , and disappeared . ’
19 The Berg , with all its elusive nuances and its stormy outbursts ( in the orchestra as well as in the solo part ) , is graphically outlined here , with the weight and support of palpable involvement in what is going on emotionally in the music 's undercurrents .
20 ‘ We know there are individual trusts with smaller turnovers than ours and mergers with acute services are going on elsewhere in the country , ’ he said .
21 Mr Ibuka , a honorary chairman , popped into the room , saw this and remembered a project on developing lightweight portable headphones going on elsewhere in the building .
22 If he then writes a monograph about a " tribe " or a " people " or a " social system " and he wants to be recognized as a scientist rather than as an artist , he is under pressure to persuade himself ( and his readers ) that the events which he saw happening before his eyes were " typical " of what might be going on elsewhere in the system .
23 We train the staff to know how to do their job , and we tell them what is going on elsewhere in the Hotel .
24 The drama might be unfocused , but we can now ask each group to look at the others ' work as examples of what 's going on elsewhere in the street .
25 ‘ There 's always something going on here in the evenings .
26 It is appropriate to ask , then , about what is going on here in terms of the organisational and operational dynamics of teams .
27 So what 's interesting here is that they seem to be having a conversation about un the university matters , the history department and so on but in fact there 's this kind of subtext going on here in which both of them want to find out about the other person 's children and both of them are being very mysterious and avoiding the question .
28 I will be able to bring what is going on here in science back to the children in the classroom , and make them realise that it is not so far away from what they are learning about .
29 This is not science-fiction but work going on now in research centres .
30 Much of the work going on now in hospitals would be carried out in the community , she points out .
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