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

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 As he waxed into an eloquent period , he would realize the absurdity of his situation or the humbug of his pleading and be overcome with internal laughter , a laughter so vast that on occasion it left him too weak to go on with the speech .
32 ‘ Do you want to go on with the lesson , or stand about talking all day long ? ’
33 In any case , if any of the pupils are to go on with the language at A level , they will simply have to learn some grammar at some stage .
34 Post-war interviews carried out by the United States Strategic Bombing Survey , confirmed such impressions : one out of three Germans indicated that his morale was affected by bombing more than any other single factor ; nine in ten of those interviewed mentioned bombing as the greatest hardship they had to suffer in the war ; three in five admitted to war-weariness on account of the bombing , and the percentage not wanting to go on with the war was significantly higher in heavily bombed than unbombed towns ; more than two-fifths said they lost hope in German victory when the raids did not stop ; and the percentage of people with confidence in the leadership was fourteen per cent lower in heavily bombed than in unbombed towns .
35 My er my sister worked in the grenade shop and erm after she ca she 'd been working at , on the manor , do you know the manor at Willenhall and then er she decided to go on with the war work and she was courting the man named , John and his father was the timekeeper , later H & T Hornes , but erm it fizzled out and anyway the romance did but erm
36 I was , simply , not prepared to go on with the discomfort of feeling — or knowing other people might feel — that I was in any way neglecting my family .
37 Yes if she 's coming out you mean you do n't , you do n't have to do it all tonight she wan might want to be talking about erm her grading a lot so you ca n't expect her to do any work until she 's got that out of her system she might want to go on for an hour or so .
38 At first it was like leaning into a thick , inert sponge , and that seemed to go on for an age .
39 Started as they meant to go on for the holiday .
40 And what started as a language-game had to go on as a lie , or a myth .
41 But , nevertheless , for me eternity was not now , and I had to go on into the future and in this world .
42 This includes considerable inspection work , firstly to establish what grinding needs to be done , and then to ensure that the body is fit , after they have completed their welding and grinding , to go on into the paint shop .
43 This will involve tone as much as doctrine , but he would be as ill-advised to go on about the Government 's intention of building a classless society , which it ca n't build anyway , as to adopt the easy belief that the climate of opinion can be left to look after itself while ministers get on with the practical business of government .
44 Like my hon. Friend the Member for Bosworth ( Mr. Tredinnick ) , I have personal views about some of those matters , but we should await the report , when we will have a little more to go on about the circumstances and how this could have happened .
45 No need to go on about the band in this preamble .
46 ‘ I do n't want to go on about the amount or work — everybody works hard .
47 This phenomenon , which we call ‘ cognitive trial-and-error ’ , requires a deductive process to go on inside the mind of the animal without its actually trying different behaviours .
48 We 're just at the beginning of it and this is going to go on till the end of April or May now , it 'll be like this .
49 This silly and childlike regressive behaviour can not be allowed to go on in a relationship in which a couple care for one another .
50 If knowing how to go on in a discipline is largely a matter of rule-following , it remains the case that the rules are as much socially imposed by the disciplinary tribe as they are by epistemic considerations ( Becher 1989 ) .
51 She wanted him to stop yet at the same time wanted him to go on in the hope that the lovely sensations would begin again .
52 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
53 Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR .
54 That joint 's got to go on by a quarter to , or goodness knows what time dinner will be ready . ’
55 this one , look at the back , I think the reason it 's so big is to go in on the sockets at the back , put , you can put two tapes on it
56 I were just so psyched up on Wednesday and then I had to go in on the Friday before so I did n't
57 I 've got a chance to go in with a women 's group up Manchester way .
58 Crewe finished the first half the stronger and were possibly unlucky not to go in with a lead , the Leeds defense was looking fragile ( Fairclough was back at central def. — agghhhh ) , the midfield ( esp .
59 Did you yourself take part in the operation to go in with the guns ?
60 It was better to stand out at the beginning than to go in with the expectation that he would soon have to provoke a further crisis by resignation .
  Previous page   Next page