Example sentences of "to go [adv] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Curing the deficiency in this area , thirdly , is the necessary base for a much larger proportion of our age groups than at present ( about 15% ) to go on to advanced education — in both academic and especially applied studies .
2 You skirt Godinton Park to go on to Great Chart .
3 They tell you to go on with artificial respiration for ever , for long after you 've given up hope .
4 Erm and erm I do n't think that on the to go on about affordable housing as I did this morning , I do n't think that in fact the affordable housing targets which the different authorities have and although I 've only quoted four authorities I think , I think the other ones will be very much the same .
5 The congregation of a 60-year-old wooden church in Darlington have been warned not to go inside in bad weather .
6 New York drug dealers seem to go in for sophisticated marketing ploys .
7 Stotland ( 1977 ) drew a portrait of the executive 's motives for being prepared to go along with corporate crime .
8 Forget the grinning drummer or the antics of the bass player ( the first to go down to stroppy retaliation ) , this band are a scorched earth antidote to faint hearts and floppy fringes .
9 ‘ I would hate it to go down in Conservative mythology that we always had to have a gaggle of young men running every campaign , ’ he said , ‘ although if we had the same bunch at the next election at least they 'd be a few years older . ’
10 The second point I want to er make Mr Deputy Speaker wholly relating to this erm er clutch of er orders of which er eighteen plus the er the schedule which the minister did n't have time to go through in great detail , is the thrust of why I put the amendment down erm in fact that this order should not be er erm approved indeed until the citizens of Gibraltar have been and able to be represented in the European parliament .
11 I want to go through in chronological order , so I turn to the back of the stack and find the lowest deposit , the first record of the new Unit .
12 The conversation is about how to respond to an invitation to " step outside " at a party : the gist of B's turn is that if someone were to ask her to go outside for " fresh air " at a party , she would not want to go outside for fresh air , and would not go .
13 So instead of an export binge , the industry is more likely to go straight to offshore production in America and Europe .
14 ‘ … someone 'll have to go up to Top Piece , too , and have a go at that wall .
15 But the result no longer has a bearing on the National Division Two relegation situation after Morley beat Newcastle Gosforth on Saturday to go clear of trouble , while West have forfeited the chance to go up to National Division One as champions , settling for second spot and promotion .
16 Mark wanted to go out to Outside Log Cabins with me .
17 Therefore , many local authorities which , as a matter of principle , refused to go out to competitive tender were extravagant high-cost local authorities , unconcerned about the good of their citizens and of the charge payer .
18 It says any proposal to decommission the hospital will first have to go out to public consultation .
19 It did n't take her long to decide she had precisely two choices — well , one , really , because even though it was n't cold it would look wrong to go out in thin cotton to the sort of party he was talking about .
20 As for Mike Lawrence , it may have been his last test flight , but he was determined to go out in flamboyant style
21 ‘ And you have no plans to go back into general nursing ? ’
22 Referring to the Dairy Crest sale , Ross Buckland , the Australian who took charge at Unigate in 1990 , says : ‘ I have not attempted to go back into past history and judge the merits of that decision . ’
23 But my guess is early retirement too , unless you 're prepared to go back to divisional work .
24 Church planting leaders may have to go back to secular employment for a time to finance the new work .
25 ‘ You do n't want to go back to Red Cottage ? ’
26 These are intended to go well beyond simple reading comprehension checks , and they focus on aspects of style as well as giving abundant opportunities for vocabulary work , language development , and discussion .
27 Yet Lang intends to go ahead with radical council reforms which local government does not want .
28 BRITAIN 'S BIGGEST survey of sexual behaviour , vetoed by Margaret Thatcher a month ago , is set to go ahead with private funding from the Wellcome Foundation Trust .
29 At a meeting soon afterwards , and having laid out its draft proposal for Newton , it had been given permission to go ahead with detailed planning although it did not offer the same safety provisions .
30 He stressed that his advice to go ahead with detailed planning for the £5 million junction had been for guidance only and that the full approval of the CIOR would still have to be sought before the junction was commissioned .
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