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

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1 I 'd like you to go on to a university and do music , but I think you 'll do that anyway , and I 'd like you to stop playing other instruments .
2 ‘ Mouse ’ was to go on to a succession of schools — at all of which he was unhappy — and to Oxford , where he was run over by a train under circumstances which strongly suggested suicide .
3 At Holy Trinity , Brompton , all four priests are Old Etonians , one of the churchwardens is a former private secretary of Margaret Thatcher 's , and it is not unknown for members of the congregation to go on to a wedding reception in St James 's Palace .
4 You used to be able to go along to a pottery , say , and say , ‘ What was going on here at about eight o'clock this morning ? ’ …
5 Initially , all that is required of volunteers is for them to go along to a clinic where a small sample of blood is taken .
6 Judging from geological surveys , they expect to have to go down to a depth of 45 metres before they find it .
7 The likelihood is that St Helens will have had their minds wonderfully concentrated by the experience and should win the replay at Wakefield Trinity tonight to go through to a meeting with Oldham in the quarter-finals on Sunday .
8 on long , summer evenings ) and quite another to go up to a girl , even one I had known for years and actually do such a thing .
9 Now it was an established custom that we very often used to go out to a strip in the desert away from the camp where we could indulge in circuits and landings to our hearts content without being related to the hour by hour flying that went on at the Base camp .
10 In this case , people met at work or in the pub will not be asked home or invited to go out to a dance .
11 He seemed to have escaped before she had and so she made her way out of the court alone , trying to decide whether to lunch in the tea room upstairs or to go out to a restaurant .
12 It struck me as I fumblingly dialled the number that it would be better to go out to a kiosk , where I would be more sure of privacy , but having come to this decision I only wanted to hurry , hurry — every minute 's delay seemed dangerous .
13 ‘ I want to go back to a size 12 again .
14 They took turns to go back to a hotel to sleep , and came back to take their places on watch and yell ‘ Pamella !
15 There was an early nineteenth-century firescreen to go back to a house in Trinity Street .
16 I 'm I 'm actually I have to go back to a house .
17 Unless — do you have to go back to a hospital with it , or anything ? ’
18 ‘ Ideally we would like to go back to a site a few months after installation , for a meeting with senior management to show them how they can take advantage of the system , ’ Chudley says .
19 I want to go back to a comment made by the hon. Member for Truro ( Mr. Taylor ) , which led the hon. Member for Blackburn ( Mr. Straw ) to go into a spate of incontinent muttering .
20 I knew I would never have the courage to go and ask for my job back after the baby was born , even if circumstances allowed it ; it would soon be filled again , and it 's always horrible to go back to a place where you 've been happy in your own little niche and find somebody else in it .
21 If we are dealing with a regression to what may be a former lifetime , then , having asked the patient to go back to a period with which his subconscious mind feels comfortable , I like to help him to create the picture of his former personality little by little .
22 Do the Bank want to go back to a time when a male official could not get married until he was earning £150 per annum and by the time he was earning that sum he was past having an interest in marriage .
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