Example sentences of "go [adv] [adv] as [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Predictably , she was not sympathetic to the boisterous ways of a young teenager , though she did not go so far as a Mrs Dudley who complained to Bloomsbury House that one of her fifteen-year-old lodgers , Willy , had ‘ broken the beading on a wardrobe and had also broken a chair ’ , offences which most parents of healthy teenagers would have accepted as part of growing up . |
2 | Indeed it seems that girls very quickly replaced boys at this task : " Evidently [ the boys " ] tongues do not go so glibly as the girls , " as the STC was already saying as early as 1875 , " for in most of the offices where girls are employed , reading boys are now unknown . " |
3 | Even from the beginning she had lain naked and adoring under the moon and Fenna could come and go as easily as the clouds did . |
4 | " shall I go as fast as a whirlwind , as fast as thought , or as fast as a bird ? " |
5 | One piece of good news is that Clinton has stated that he will not go as far as a recent legislative proposal , which would have required certain foreign-owned firms and branches to report a minimum amount of US taxable income . |
6 | The party could only go as far as the unions would allow and their influence was apparent at all levels . |
7 | The indecent assaults did not go as far as the rapes but were ‘ equally repulsive ’ . |
8 | ‘ We 'll go as far as the village , ’ Sharpe said . |
9 | That 's right , but it does n't go as far as the Glen , |
10 | And you could only go as far as the money would go , could n't you ? |
11 | Certainly , it is important to study bureaucracies as institutions in their own right , even if we would not go as far as the poet Alexander Pope who wrote : |
12 | John d'Ancona , who has been OSO 's director-general for 12 years , doubts if it will go as far as the creation of a series of OSO clones operating under the DTI umbrella to deal with specific industrial sectors . |
13 | This was in itself , however , of little significance in an atmosphere impregnated with tension , and anxiety that the western offensive could not conceivably go as smoothly as the Polish and Scandinavian campaigns . |