Example sentences of "go [adv prt] [v-ing] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | It goes on flouting the popular will by refusing a referendum on the Maastricht treaty . |
2 | Some of that money goes on convincing the local community . |
3 | The ICRF is such a worthy cause and what makes it particularly so is that it uses just 8p out of every £1 for administration , meaning 92p really goes on advancing the research , ’ she said . |
4 | But if I insist on forcing the spontaneous towards an end which I already deem rational , I remain imprisoned within a circle of old concepts , reason goes on doing the same kind of sums , there can be no novelty except the discovery of unnoticed implications of the familiar . |
5 | I 'll see the Shah goes on making the omelettes " |
6 | If you do want to go on receiving the New Internationalist you need do nothing . |
7 | Say whether you will be happy to go on eating the product now that you are more aware of what it contains . |
8 | And so they were prepared to go on taking the punishment , taking the cost because their objectives were , ha had a different scale of value to the objectives sought by the United States . |
9 | And so they were prepared to go on taking the punishment , taking the cost because their objectives were , ha had a different scale of value to the objectives sought by the United States . |
10 | Throughout the 1980s the expanding prison population caused Home Office administrators to question how long it would be possible to go on supplying an unlimited number of places , at enormous cost , for however many convicted or remand prisoners were sent to them by the courts . |
11 | After that I realised that — like anyone else — I had to go on earning the money . |
12 | In the late 1980s Bluetts agreed to a mangement buyout and capital investment but the firm 's inability to meet the cost of the rent on its new premises opposite Claridge 's Hotel , and the slackness of trade as perceived by Chesfield , has meant that they are no longer willing to go on supporting the company . |
13 | Muggers who decided to phase out mugging by 1993 could hardly expect to be let off , yet the UK expected to go on breaking the law with impunity . |
14 | The review is normally chaired by an internal member of staff , often a head of department unassociated with the course ; and it may take the form of two or three meetings with the course team , enabling the course team to go on developing the course in the light of advice from the panel . |
15 | It is unbecoming to go on hating an enemy like this once a conflict is over . |
16 | In the Commons , the Energy Minister Tim Eggar said the government was prepared to go on funding the current redundancy terms available to miners until April next year . |
17 | This means that , as we continue to diet , we must reduce calorie intake a little more in order to go on achieving a satisfactory rate of weight loss . |
18 | On the other hand , she really wanted to go on exploring the nineteenth-century letters … |
19 | Aegina — like a tiny Hong Kong — has to go on buying the stuff from the mainland . |
20 | ‘ Oh , I think an investigation into the bogus account will be very revealing , I do n't see how I could have managed to go on robbing the customers from inside Swansea Jail , you should have stopped when you were ahead , Spencer . ’ |
21 | So Robinson Crowso survived , and lives to go on spreading the Pest Control word throughout the highlands and islands . |
22 | Those of us who want to go on using the lesion method should n't be too despondent about Wood 's results because the conditions under which a system like this will give double dissociations are likely to be very rare in nature . |
23 | By refraining from questioning I 've allowed Liza to go on living a lie . |
24 | ‘ After all , from what you told me before you went to Japan you intend to go on living a bachelor life , almost as if I do n't exist . ’ |
25 | ‘ And are you prepared to go on living the rest of your life in tune to your sister 's wishes ? ’ |
26 | So it is important now to go on fighting the battles , once so hard-won . |
27 | There is a big question mark over whether he 's got sufficient chemicals to produce enough kerosene to go on fighting the war . |
28 | It was wrong to leave her family in the first place , wrong , having come here to go on leading the life she did . ’ |
29 | Supporting the family and carers who may not be able to go on giving the very demanding twenty-four hour care needed in the later stages of the illness . |
30 | There is nothing more annoying than a computer system that works beautifully , say , in a library , and then one goes in at nine thirty in the morning and you ca n't get books out because the power has gone off , and if we are sure to go on having a society with industrial disputes , we want a system that is not capable of being completely ruined by one small section of workers deciding not to work on a particular day , and so I think while we 're putting them in , while we want to put them in in a way which that is compatible , we also need to think of having a kind of fail-safe system , particularly in the sort of more serious applications such as medicine and transport and so on , whereby we ca n't be held to ransom by very a small group of people , or indeed by just some technical fault , such as a power failure or something of this kind . |