Example sentences of "to go [adv prt] with [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Kohl has decided to go on with a fast-breeder reactor in Kalkar on the Rhine , although development costs have quadrupled to 6–5 billion DM . |
2 | There is slightly more to go on with the latter however , and one seems justified in presuming the work of at least two men . |
3 | To go on with the utter silence or to break the silence , pretending nothing had happened . |
4 | It is possible to go on with the same therapist to deal with the problems which caused you to need the regression experience in the first place . |
5 | With bottle feeding you have some choices after six months ; to go on with the original formula , use a follow-on formula or start boiled cow 's milk . |
6 | ‘ But we did n't want to go in with a heavy commitment at first ; we took a PC and wrote our own very simple software to deal with incoming orders . ’ |
7 | Androgyny was expect to go along with a broad , flexible and effective repertoire of behaviours , and well-adjusted emotions . |
8 | It will be necessary to see how far it is possible to go along with a strict criterion-referenced system or what kind of compromises may be worked out if such a system has advantages of motivating pupils and aiding changes in curriculum . |
9 | It is a mistake , I submit , to go along with the Dominican Matthew Fox in denying the concepts of the Fall and sin . |
10 | They refuse to go along with the current vogues to which the impressionable Continentals pander . |
11 | In such an optimistic climate it was easier for national governments and interest groups to go along with the economic ambitions of the EEC ; it was not seen as a great threat to their own concerns . |
12 | What the Independent very badly needs is very solid professional newspaper management er to go along with the good franchise which it has created erm and a proper owner who can actually er do what all of us in newspapers have to do from times to times which is back a promising newspaper . |
13 | We should prefer to go along with the European Communitywide scheme so that British industry is not put at a disadvantage . |
14 | It is easier to go along with the false cheerfulness . |
15 | It is just a matter of how you can build up the Kuwaiti nationality to go along with the growing community in the country and we were just a developing country . |
16 | While Judith , Rachel and Karen are sure their partners are happy to go along with the little alterations they try to make , Zelda says that interfering too much can prove to be very dangerous to a relationship . |
17 | However , she was prepared to go along with the advisory teacher 's point of view in the sessions and reassured herself concerning her own fears by using whole-class lessons to reinforce what she felt pupils should have discovered . |
18 | Born in Liverpool to a West African father in 1951 , Conteh won ABA , British and Commonwealth titles but was stripped of his world title by the World Boxing Council for failing to go through with a contracted defence in 1977 and failed three times to regain the championship before retiring in 1981 . |
19 | She just could n't wait to go through with the whole messy , life-destroying business . |
20 | He knew he would have to go through with the nightly ritual . |
21 | car conked out so Vicki stayed with the car and her who we were going to take a walk in Ruddington , and I walked home with her to get Malcolm to go over with the other car . |
22 | Well who wants to go out with a doddery old bugger like me anyway ! |
23 | Conscientious objection rose markedly ; 40 of the 400-strong military contingent ordered to go out with the anti-aircraft missiles refused to do so . |
24 | Why should you have to go round with a frozen face because a child has kicked the cat ? |