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

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1 Maybe the bullet will go somewhere near the direction you aimed it .
2 ‘ Then we can go on up the highway until we catch them , ’ Hugh suggested .
3 How did you go on at the fox hunt today ?
4 Could n't go on with the performance even with the understudies because of the police coming in .
5 ‘ To keep Bones , would you rather go on with the competition ? ’
6 whether they would go on with the scheme or with a part of it , having the public offices in a well-devised and properly-arranged manner , all connected with each other , instead of being , as now , disconnected .
7 The doctor then told Alexander that he must go on with the treatment .
8 They laughed so much , they could n't go on with the interview .
9 ‘ You must go on with the preparations as though you were alone .
10 We are here to have a committee meeting about the Season , and about your attitude , and indeed about whether we can go on with the Season at all . ’
11 ‘ I must go on with the post , but I 'll send somebody to help you as soon as I can .
12 For a second it looked as though she would go on with the game , but then she stopped smiling and her eyes slid away from his .
13 ‘ We can go on to the depot at 80° South , leave the food there , and then go back .
14 In the street outside the hotel , a crowd cheered and cheered ; periodically someone would go on to the balcony and throw roses down to the assembled admirers .
15 Can we go on to the minutes of the committee meeting of sixth December then .
16 I says Richard would you not even go on to the tech and , or somewhere that you could get better on your drawing and he , he
17 ‘ I shall go on to the Saracen 's Head . ’
18 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 .
19 ‘ You away in and I 'll go on to the hotel by myself .
20 Then we 'll meet ye all at the Curragh Bar for a few good old jars , and then we 'll go on to the hotel .
21 Could go on to the rugby and go with them could n't he ?
22 Ellen , please ask a maid to find some dry clothes for me , and then I 'll go on to the village .
23 Ron said that I should not go on to the track and kill myself because I might pull a hamstring .
24 Can I , yeah , can I go on to the application if I may Chairman ?
25 ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’
26 On it were the words : ‘ Do not go on to the moor .
27 Erm what will happen is that we will er hopefully at this meeting er set a budgetary , budgetary position within the guidelines required by the policy committee and then that will go forward together with all the other service committees to the policy committee on the twenty seventh of January and from then we will go on to the County Council on the fifteenth of February .
28 ‘ Fenella will go on to the Fire Court , of course , ’ said Floy , who had very nearly managed to convince himself of this .
29 Let's go on to the Fire Court .
30 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 .
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