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

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1 Turning , she beheld Araminta at the head of the stairs , and remembered that Miss Merchiston had instructed her to go down to her parlour when she had left her mother .
2 Claire goes over to her father 's house in the afternoon .
3 Whatever had happened , nevertheless , he had not brought the girl back , but had turned her off to go home to her husband .
4 But the girl was unhappy with her foster parents and was determined to go home to her ‘ bitter and lonely ’ father .
5 SAMANTHA FOX : For trying to make out that there 's no harm in Page Three and going on to her pre-destined role as a bimbo rock chick exhorting her listeners to touch her and feel her body , helping another generation of idiot males think that women are there purely for their own gratification .
6 Marie Marie was going down to her mother 's she was running as usual , she dashed up to our back door and said , is Doug around ?
7 She was taking off her hat and coat as she spoke ; then going over to her aunt , she bent down and kissed her on the cheek , and followed this with the same salutation for her uncle ; and in response he patted her on the shoulder .
8 Going over to her parked Jaguar , he had opened the driver 's door , bent down and felt under the seat .
9 She was hardly aware of the car pulling up outside the house , or of going up to her bedroom , claiming that she was too exhausted to relax on the beach and enjoy the remainder of the sunshine .
10 Enormously impressed by this friendly , helpful girl , who did n't seem in the least like most receptionists she encountered , Ellie slid back the registration card , accepted her plastic key , gave one of her funny little smiles , and decided that before going up to her room she 'd better try and find Donal .
11 ‘ How dare you come barging into my room without knocking ? ’ she gasped , scrambling up on to the rumpled counterpane , two hands going up to her blonde hair as she felt his gaze take a rapid inventory of her voluptuous disarray .
12 There had been no time for a cup of coffee and she 'd eaten nothing the night before , going straight to her cabin .
13 After she had washed and dressed in warm cord trousers , leather boots and a thick sweater , she this time took the precaution of collecting her anorak before going out to her car and driving off in the direction of Great Yarmouth .
14 And so she settled down quietly into our family life for over a year , until one of the aunts , Aunt Kate , came to see us , and after that there was talk between our parents — children always know these things , having good ears — about it perhaps being best now for Grandma to be going back to her little house in Hampshire .
15 ‘ He was going back to her flat .
16 Going back to her old love was impossible because of his drinking habits .
17 Mrs Gracie and I are leaving those poor children — there is nothing we can do for them , after all — and going back to her house in Highbury .
18 She was going back to her father 's house to show people what she had written in her schoolbooks about them .
19 She 'd thought about going back to her room for a while , maybe find out from Josie what she 'd been caught up in the night before , but it would take her more than half an hour to walk .
20 She had let her guard down to an enormous extent and the idea of going back to her old life was actually frightening .
21 ‘ We came back early , ’ she said with a shrug before going back to her rifling .
22 ‘ Suzi and I are going back to her dance studio and she 's going to put me through the dance routine again . ’
23 The gossip is that she is thinking of resigning from the practice and going back to her home town .
24 Rose was going back to her flat .
25 Going back to her car but
26 going back to her childhood , well then if she can remember things her parents said
27 ‘ I 'm going round to her house to find out what 's wrong , ’ she said .
28 ‘ Once she had the key , and whilst her husband signed the formalities , she was to go up to her room , put the handbag containing the Tongue — and money , pearls , and so on — on a ledge as near as possible to a door which was going to be left deliberately ajar .
29 He just goes up to her cage and stands there , hardly even looking at her , and she quietens down quick as anything . ’
30 Mrs Tamm turns on her heel and goes back to her desk .
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