Example sentences of "would go [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | And she 'd go on the demonstrations in it too , I 've seen her at a rally in a park dragging that beaded hem through the mud . |
2 | He 'd send them then , he every dock was numbered from one to hundred and thirty and he 'd say righto , number one so and so , number five so and so and of course when they come back to the pool , they 'd go on the end of the rota . |
3 | ‘ If I were Jerry , ’ said Finlayson , ‘ I 'd go for the France . |
4 | But , if a test on a chimpanzee would save my child 's life I 'm afraid I 'd go for the test on the chimpanzee . |
5 | ‘ I think I 'd go for the Loire , on the whole . |
6 | We arranged that I 'd go for the weekend , but I would n't leave my sister . |
7 | Director said , ‘ My first man into Athens , a young man but a good friend of Lawrence 's , has promised the widow that we 'd go for the jugular on this one . ’ |
8 | If I were Souness I 'd go for the Charles Bronson option . |
9 | We had to go from the School to the School for two years and back to the School again , and er finally we 'd go to the Academy . |
10 | He 'd go to the centre of town , would n't he . |
11 | Now , this is n't a very good impression and I think you 'd go to the doctors if you had something like this . |
12 | There was very little social life on board , but when you come home to Lowestoft , they 'd go to the Suffolk , and treat one another , or to the Stone jug , a little farther up the road . |
13 | You 'd go to the back of the pub and sit down . |
14 | They would visit the cemetery together : ‘ she would take a tram car , see she 'd one or two buried there , it was her own family , and we 'd go to the cemetery nearly every Sunday if the weather was good . |
15 | I 'd go to the cottage and raise hell . ’ |
16 | That we 'd go to the shore , and we 'd spend a whole day there , no lemonade and biscuits then . |
17 | ‘ You 'd go to the wall for the boy 's story ? ’ |
18 | It had upset him at the time , but you had to get over stuff like that or you 'd go to the wall . |
19 | He had said to the clergyman that opportunity would n't knock , but you never knew and you definitely had to keep your spirits up or you 'd go to the wall . |
20 | And we 'd go to the theatre or but I mean we do all that sort of thing still but we just have to cram it into the week . |
21 | Because he had too much time , he 'd go to the club afternoon and night . |
22 | Afterwards , we 'd go to the Quality Inn for a poached egg . ’ |
23 | If he 'd got any sense at all ( which he probably did n't ) he 'd go to the bank and try to draw out money . |
24 | I thought I 'd go into erm I 'd go to the bank on my way to this afternoon . |
25 | She 'd go to the shops , then have a bath , change into — what ? |
26 | Why you would n't break a window to break a window , why you 'd go to the trouble of using a glass cutter |
27 | I suppose you must get a thrill out of it , but if you really knew anything you 'd go to the police . ’ |
28 | He must have spent all last night developing and printing them ( as if he 'd go to the chemist 's ! |
29 | So she 'd go to the chemist not to the doctor then ? |
30 | I 'd go to the SS Great Britain and sit by the breezy river , and I 'd compose my stupid self and compose my story so that I could tell lies confidently instead of giving myself away . |