Example sentences of "could go [adv prt] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 If Barnet , who admit debts of £1.3 million , go out of the League there could be a reprieve for Halifax and Walsall could go up to Division Two in their place .
2 sometimes come to Glasgow and either of them could go up to Stirling
3 It only needs someone to knock a window out and the whole thing could go up in flames . ’
4 She hoped the departure would be as early as possible so that she and Joshua could go over to Leeds for the birth of their first grandchild .
5 ‘ Italian fashions , ’ said Felicity , ‘ the ready-to-wear collections — one of us could go over to Milan … ’
6 erm towards the end of the century it was just about possible for middle class girls , or a few middle class girls to get a reasonable academic education at one of the G P D S schools — we 've got one in Hove , you know the girls ' public day school trust foundations — but only very few went there and got what would be equivalent now to a kind of secondary education and a very , very , very , very tiny minority of those girls could go on to university if they faced an enormous amount of opposition when they got there and also to get there in the first place , but for most girls there was only a basic elementary education , which increasingly stressed the sort of domestic side of a girl 's vocation .
7 The effect would be that after a complainant gave evidence which the judge thought credible , if the prosecution at that point decided on due reflection to discontinue , the judge could go on to call all the remaining prosecution witnesses himself .
8 With this as a starting point , you could go on to experiment with even more additional lights .
9 If we could state positively , and with hope of agreement , what the point of education is , then we could go on to debate how it should be provided , how much public money should be spent on provision , and how much variety should be permitted , within the general legal framework .
10 Yeah because erm , poor thingy , the girl I went to school with she went on to Spring Hill when she was fifteen , see you could go on to grammar school when you were fifteen then as well as going at eleven
11 One could go on with provisos of this kind , or with hints as to procedure in this or that case , for pages .
12 And this party looked as if it could go on for hours yet !
13 This could go on for hours .
14 Let's hope the ms strikes lucky this time , otherwise this could go on for generations .
15 I could go on for pages .
16 I could go on for minutes on end .
17 ‘ Oh , well then , that trip could go on for years .
18 ‘ But this could go on for years . ’
19 Every week she gets worse and yet it could go on for years .
20 It could go on for years possibly .
21 Up to now , the Government , rather than the UN , has met the cost of the 3,000-strong British contingent and the UN presence could go on for years , he said .
22 If the sky remained clear , I could go on by moonlight .
23 This could go on till morning , it was ridiculous .
24 Mr Mitterrand said : ‘ During one of our meals , Mr Major said if Denmark was again to reject the treaty then he could not see how Britain could go along with Maastricht .
25 Two , he could go along with Marler , pretend to accept him at face value , and this way he could keep an eye on him .
26 I could , I could go along with Phil on that .
27 And then she could go off to Australia with a real crime on her conscience .
28 So that basically is it how would we see the course 's structure I do n't think we 've got time to do that today I wanted really to just to throw some ideas with you good folks and get the benefit of your thoughts and experience so that I could go back to Napier and say this is what my committee says
29 If there was n't any sign of anyone , then she could go back to bed and sleep peacefully .
30 ‘ I should like to huff and to puff and to blow his house down and take Maggie away from him and she and me and Francie could go back to Ireland and live quietly together and play music and have a little step dancing from time to time . ’
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