Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] to the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 If you start to go on to the other p , side of the page , start again .
2 He decided to go on to the second and third caves , determined to find what he was looking for .
3 I had to go on to the usual horror .
4 This entirely new production , due to go on to the Royal National Theatre in London , remains true to the essence of Lorca 's play , and as vibrant as the heat and colours of ‘ the land of sun and shadow ’ .
5 Then continue walking at this pace until you feel ready to go on to the 30 day walk back to fitness programme later in this chapter .
6 When you are ready to go on to the next potency , the whole process is repeated with a single poppy seed granule of the desired strength .
7 We must insist on a system of tests that will be for the benefit of the pupils ; that will test what each one can do in practical work and in theoretical understanding ; and will serve as a motive for each to go on to the next stage .
8 If he does this then a sociological perspective has been brought to bear on the first idea and the researcher is ready to go on to the next step , which will be one of limiting his ideas to a feasible scheme of work .
9 But evolution ploughed on remorselessly , enabling only the most adaptable to go on to the next stage .
10 Erm , right , what I want to do this week , is to go on to the next er , work of Freud 's , that follows after erm , group psychology , or rather to the next two , because I 'm gon na back these two books together for , hi there , , erm gon na back these two books together , because as we 'll see , they , they really deal with the same subject .
11 It concerns me , in fact I was , I 've had a theory for a couple of years now , that what the Tories wish us all to do is to go on to the American system of medical insurance .
12 He dismissed the subject from his mind and decided to go down to the tiny lunchroom he ran for his employees , to get a cup of coffee .
13 Jennifer remembered Tristram 's face grinning through the wall , and the firm warm clasp of his hand as he reached through to her ; she remembered a night when the moonlight was like mercury on the trees — and she remembered her own sudden cry of love and joy , which Mrs Prynn had thought was the deadly shriek of a mandrake and which had caused her to go down to the lower scullery to see if Jennifer was safe .
14 Under the new policy , anyone working on the twelfth floor will need to go down to the first floor to clock out , to the fourth floor to find a smoking room , down to the first to clock on again and back to the twelfth to carry on working .
15 In fact , he was the one who encouraged me to go down to the Lesbian and Gay Centre in Edinburgh .
16 The sister did not like this at all and called the paediatrician , who examined and decided that he ought to go down to the special care baby unit after all .
17 Only the leading two candidates are entitled to go through to the second round .
18 In addition , the 16 teams to go through to the third round will each receive an illustrated copy of The Guinness Book of Cricket Facts and Feats .
19 just home from her studies at college in California , teamed up with Welsh junior champion Claire Bennett , also of Mold , to go through to the last four of the women 's doubles .
20 He only needed to make third to go through to the next round .
21 He now looks a good bet to go through to the next stage of the competition tomorrow .
22 In the Junior Singles final John Nolan of Blackrock looked almost certain to go through to the British Isles Championship when he led Belmont 's Paul Daly 20-11 .
23 The first filter sends a signal to the second filter telling it how much to allow to go through to the outgoing side of our personality .
24 If one of these groups were to go over to the other side — as the army did in Romania — the balance of forces would be altered .
25 We have been asked to give that up and to go over to the European Community system , with the European Court and majority voting — the shoe is pinching all the time .
26 Now I 'm going to go inside and get myself a drink , ’ he announced , ‘ and then we are going to go over to the far field where there 's a modicum of peace and we are going to look at these plans together , OK ? ’
27 As Nina Fishman ( 1980 ) has pointed out , despite the undoubted idealism and enthusiasm of committed trade unionists in these industries there was considerable reluctance among NUM members to go over to the National Coal Board , to run ‘ their ’ industry .
28 Soon they will have to go up to the front-line again .
29 Team 1 is concentrating on the basement and ground floor , so I want you to go up to the 4th level as team 2 will be putting out the flames on floors 2 + 3 .
30 Either he had to go up to the Broken Hill Ironworks at Newcastle or she had to go down to Canberra to see some official about tariffs or quotas or immigration levels .
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