Example sentences of "he go [adv] [to-vb] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Therese does n't want him to go off to paint the Belgian ambassador 's wife . ’
2 eventually I went up and I tried to get him to go down to sleep again , and he was shutting his eyes and on his dummy , but he was
3 The ‘ Carry Ons ’ allowed him to go home to read in the evenings , to sit playing his classical piano records in the still sparsely-fitted flat at Farley Court , an apartment even more spartan than his previous homes , complete with whitewashed walls .
4 They risk leaving him there and him going on to do damage to personal property .
5 He goes straight to work .
6 He goes on to explain that he was never a follower of Spinoza ( the seventeenth-century philosopher , who identified God with Nature ) .
7 He goes on to explain that this change was fundamental to the development of Combined Operations as he was then able to order the ships and craft , and requisition bases among the other resources controlled by the Minister of Defence ( Winston Churchill ) .
8 He goes on to explain the nature of a specifically Christian order — a society which would construct a framework for the political acts of the state , which would realize the importance of a Christian education and in which a " Community of Christians " , an elite of both laity and clerisy , would influence the values of the ordinary citizens of the country .
9 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 .
10 As he goes on to explain :
11 then he goes on to explain why
12 But as he goes on to explain , some of the newer council houses were n't much of an improvement .
13 He goes on to mention that there was also a ‘ brass-work lately erected ’ .
14 He goes on to mention the occasional embarrassing moments which occur when firms try to pass backhanders .
15 He goes on to refer to legislation in 1980 in West Germany and in 1982 in Italy whereby post-operative transsexuals are deemed to belong to their chosen sex and have the rights and duties of that sex .
16 O'Neill survived but as he goes on to record : ‘ The Catholic streets in Belfast became and remained a forest of Irish Republican flags for the duration of the celebrations . ’
17 He goes on to remark that a few minutes later the same antlers could be in use with the animals full weight behind them as they slash and batter those of an opposing stag .
18 He goes on to state that the great coat charity is alive and is charged to Holborough Court Estate and was paid until his death by William Lee Esq .
19 And he goes on to ask some similarly pertinent questions : ‘ To whom does a person 's body belong ?
20 In the constitution he goes on to elaborate : the hypothec tacitly covered all property received by the heir or trustee from the estate of the deceased ; the action for the hypothec lay for the same amount as the original actio in personam ; it extended only over property received from the estate and not over any personal property of the heir or trustee .
21 When Lok acquires this tool , he goes on to compare the new people to things he is familiar with , noting their menace , power , and sheer attractiveness by comparing them to a famished wolf , the waterfall , honey and Oa .
22 He goes on to give a splendid example of the thing he has in mind , when an old Muslim tribesman went on urging a drug-addicted English hippy to ‘ pray to Jesus the Messiah ’ , until he was converted and delivered .
23 He goes on to talk about ( a ) fly-fishing ( b ) car repair bills ( c ) rugger , with Paul while his hand is up Kate .
24 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 .
25 As he goes on to point out , the contention may not always be relied on .
26 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 ’ .
27 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 .
28 When he goes on to justify his high estimate of the poem , Bunting specifies :
29 Nevertheless , he goes on to justify his pursuit of the contradiction by claiming that the instruments provided by literary theory may be refined and transformed through their application to particular texts .
30 He goes on to describe his Ananas ( pineapple ) in fine fruit , coffee berries colouring , guajavas about the blossom , ‘ in short all my Exotics are in a mighty prosperous thriving condition in the Stoves as well as the Greenhouse ’ .
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