Example sentences of "go [adv] [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | But , I take it a little step further because if I do go somewhere like a bus and people are smoking then I 'll actually approach and ask them to put it out . |
2 | ‘ We could go on to a nightclub afterwards . ’ |
3 | Then we could go on to a dance in our local Labour Hall ? |
4 | ‘ You ca n't go on to a talk show and talk about the plots of the books . |
5 | He or she would decide whether cases should go on to a Children 's Hearing before the Children 's Panel , or whether to take no further action . |
6 | Few of Camille 's schoolmates , even had they been able to read and write , would go on to a career in the sciences , since the chemistry lab had been the first to succumb , years back , when the rules had just been relaxed and attitudes to education liberalized . |
7 | It may stop after one or two drinks or it may go on into a spree . |
8 | That would be one less thing for him to worry about with regards to his mother , for she would still be mistress of the house , at least until the war was over , which might go on for a year , perhaps two . |
9 | ‘ He seemed to think the meeting might go on for a while . ’ |
10 | It 's always the programmer — it 's very , very seldom the computer — and if I could just go on for a minute , I feel it 's essential that young children , particularly in the primary schools , get used to using hardware and programing , so that they will see the computer as part of their normal lives , like reading and writing and anything else they use . |
11 | ‘ The likes of her 'll go on for a bit yet , ’ said Jack . |
12 | It is well known that local reversals of movement occur and may possibly go on for a number of years . |
13 | The same realization came to the King , pushed towards his precipice by Hardinge harshly telling him that he could not go on without a decision . |
14 | It was burning , fraying at the edges , riddled with violent cancers of nationalism , spite and greed that could not go on without a climax for much longer . |
15 | ‘ He says he wo n't go on without a warm-up act first . ’ |
16 | ULSTER 's amateur actors have dramatically upstaged the bombers — by ensuring that their show would go on despite a £1,000 blast . |
17 | Rufus had always heard that nothing can go on in a village without the gossips knowing . |
18 | This is just one kind of learning which can go on inside a robot 's workings . |
19 | You curve the surface by making it go down into a hollow . |
20 | In an otherwise mixed year for the British sports car , TVR 's 1992 will go down as a year of achievement and of huge promise for the future . |
21 | And in some class rooms the kids are gon na go down for a variety of reasons , they 're gon na they 're gon na work their ticket and in other class rooms they wo n't ! |
22 | I wo n't go down without a struggle , Nenna thought . |
23 | But Doherty , 22 , of Dublin , did not go down without a fight and doggedly pursued Hendry all afternoon . |
24 | For both reasons , the amount of looking at the listener should go down during a phase of speech production which involves a large amount of cognitive planning . |
25 | Cup of tea would go down like a bomb but |
26 | His ‘ zeal for privatisation , ’ says a Welsh nationalist MP hopefully , ‘ will go down like a rat sandwich ’ in the valleys . |
27 | Normally following that kind of response the ramp idea would go down like a lead balloon . |
28 | ‘ I bet this would go down like a lead balloon if it was known in Grantley police station . |
29 | The viewing figure must go down by a half now . |
30 | Nobody can go in without a letter from Earth Commander . ’ |