Example sentences of "go [adv] [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ You must go on with the preparations as though you were alone .
2 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 .
3 Can we go on to the minutes of the committee meeting of sixth December then .
4 Because you 'd sort of , they , they 'd go up and then if , if you went any farther you 'd go on to the doctors ' lectures you see .
5 For myself , I would let the others go on to the caves and pass the time instead above ground in the large riverside village of Saint-Pé ( the Gascon form of Pierre ) -de-Bigorre , which has a nicely arcaded square and a few pleasing remains of its old abbey church , once the grandest religious building in the Pyrenees but now part in effect of the dull parish church that later replaced it , after it had been fired by Protestant arsonists in the Wars of Religion .
6 It explained the problems although we were a bit — we 'll go on to the cons in a minute .
7 He could have basked in the illusion of being a benevolent father-figure to his people , actually loved and appreciated and secure in the knowledge that even after he went , things would go on along the tracks he had laid down .
8 Due to the pre-UK release — ha ha — of ‘ Your Arsenal ’ , much is forgiven concerning that dreaded disappearance from Australia last year ( He does n't just do it here then — IM ) , but a snappy return trip would not go astray in the hearts of the young distraught fans , please please please …
9 And he would go away , he would n't say , Come on we 'll go down to the cleaners and tell them , he would go away himself you see .
10 ‘ Would never go down to the cellars like everyone else when the air-raid siren went .
11 , ’ If the quotation is a common one you could acknowledge this fact but turn it into a plus , ‘ We all know the lovely poem by John Masefield , which you can never tire of hearing , ( Pause ) ‘ I must go down to the seas
12 Do you go down to the baths every night ?
13 We used to some of us other boys we 'd go down to the banks and the Winter time .
14 Do n't you ever go down to the hostels or down
15 Now , shall we go down to the police station ?
16 You ca n't go down to the shops , you ca n't go round your mum 's , you ca n't go to your auntie 's , you 're losing your freedom .
17 She would not go down for the fireworks .
18 Well let's go down for the jars and then they can , see
19 lets hope scum go down for the geordies tomorrow ( match of the day in norway ) ! ( hmm — my futba-english justs keeps improving does n't it ; - ] )
20 ‘ Why did n't she go down with the others ? ’
21 But how will it go down with the fans like England soccer heroes Gary Lineker and Des Walker or film stars Liz Taylor and Joan Collins ?
22 Australian Greg Norman may go down in the record-books as the unluckiest player in the major championships .
23 this match will go down in the records as a runaway victory for United but all the goals came in the last ten minutes …
24 Stopping on the lonely road , I watched the sun go down in the trees behind Thornfield , and then in the silence I heard a horse approaching .
25 The right hon. Member for Chingford said that he can not go along with the negotiations at Maastricht because he wants to protect Britain from ’ rabid dogs and dictators ’ — some might say from himself .
26 ‘ We 'd better go through to the sports field , ’ said Robert .
27 When boys reach puberty , in primitive societies today as in ancient Greece , a group of them will go away into the mountains , jungle , or other hostile environment to undergo hardship and trials which , if successfully endured , allow them to return to society at a higher level , as adults .
28 Logistics will go over to the operations division .
29 He was saying , ‘ Now we 'll go over to the bees , ’ and he went over and they were all lying at the bottom .
30 Mind you , I suppose you 'll go off with the Italians .
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