Example sentences of "going [to-vb] at the " in BNC.

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1 ‘ And most likely going to sit at the next table . ’
2 I 'm going to retire at the end of this season
3 Is he guaranteeing to tell us where everyone of the cooks is going to come at the next Policy Meeting .
4 I think that it was during this visit that Peter Duval-Smith tacked on to us when we were going to dine at the Turkish harbour .
5 IN THE FINAL part of my series , I am going to look at the subject of wind .
6 ‘ She made it clear no decision had been taken and she was going to look at the Tomlinson Report with a totally objective view , ’ he said .
7 How has a Montpellier fishwife so mastered the art of composition that with her basket of fish for the bouillabaisse she is presenting a picture of such splendour that instead of going to look at the famous collection of paintings in the Musée Fabre you drive off as fast as possible to the coast to order a dish cooked with just such fish ?
8 ‘ There 's no one of any consequence in London at the moment , ’ she told him , ‘ but you wo n't be able to move for the millions of nobodies going to look at the Tower . ’
9 Tonight , we 're going to look at the problems of the people .
10 He said , ‘ When are we going to look at the badger ? ’
11 We are going to look at the whole question of BBC financing and the licence fee in the run-up to the renewal of the charter .
12 I believe that er we did n't er consider going to look at the development because it was quite clearly in the minds of a large percentage of us that it was contrary to the town plan and so we did not think it was necessary to do that .
13 For the next two chapters we are going to look at the special role that money plays in the economy .
14 Right Suzanne , now we 're going to look at the various parts of the Topper and how they fit together .
15 I welcome the initiative that have already been started within the County and I shall be going to look at the site which is being offered to us , er but I do feel that we should be progressing these matters as soon as possible .
16 But erm I I do n't , still do n't see from this how we 're going to look at the underlying systems because it 's the system that concerns me .
17 In this chapter , then , we are going to look at the intonation of one-syllable utterances .
18 Well are you going to look at the telly
19 Oh that 's what I was going to look at the brushes
20 You know when we 're going to look at the four forty five I may as well get book four two nine six seven .
21 First then , continuing our series of programmes on applications of computers , today we 're going to look at the so-called microprocessor , and to help me do this I have Doctor Fred Halsall and Doctor Paul Lister , who are engineers and specialists in this particular area .
22 This is the first of a series of programmes in which we 're going to look at the computer and its impact on our lives .
23 In this programme we are going to look at the way in which British music has developed in recent years and its relationship to that produced by Continental Europe .
24 Nobody knew who was going to win at the end .
25 Then what am I going to do at the weekends ?
26 Which is why you s when you set it up , you 've got to say , Well what are people going to do at the end of the workshop , that demonstrates that they 've learnt something from it ?
27 What 're you going to do at the end of the week ?
28 All of the youths studied were in their last year of school , and all were going to leave at the minimum school leaving age ( Corrigan , 1979 ) .
29 They sort of could n't care less if you were going to leave at the end of the fourth year .
30 All their time was spent on the ones that were going to stay on , so ones that were going to leave at the end of the fourth year were never there and nobody sort of worried about them . ’
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