Example sentences of "goes [adv prt] [verb] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I appreciate that the number of cases in which the taker and driver away is not the driver who goes on to cause personal injury or damage will be comparatively few , but I ask my right hon. Friend whether it is necessary to make such a draconian change in the traditional principles of British law , or to do it by reversing the normal burden of proof .
2 The transformer unit , when Zener stabilized , goes on dissipating full power .
3 The decree goes on to allow Eastern Christians , separated from the Catholic Church , to receive Catholic sacraments in some circumstances .
4 Roberts goes on to link educational achievement with the level of economic development of the region of out-migration .
5 Consultative paper 66 , Draft Guidance on Proper Trades and Proper Markets in Relation to On-exchange Derivatives , price £5 , identifies what , in the SIB 's view , is a proper trade and goes on to consider proper markets .
6 Much actual sociology of culture presumes , in a way inevitably , the typical or dominant relations of the period with which it is concerned ; it goes on to adduce detailed evidence of these .
7 The proposal goes on to list specific topics in this course for years 3–5 , for which the project grant would be especially useful .
8 He compares war in modern circumstances with a plague , and tries to make us see that we have exactly the same universal common interest in transcending military conflict that we have in getting plague under control , and that it 's necessary to use all our intelligence and imagination to break the millennial connection of intersocial change with war , and then he goes on to make practical proposals .
9 The cowboy , by contrast , stays faithful to his British films , however limited their ambition , becomes a director and goes on to make serious pictures .
10 This book describes their course of training and goes on to relate personal recollections of their wartime service , bringing to the fore the relatively unknown part played in World War Two by the TAG .
11 The warning notice then goes on to address specific risks involved in particular types of transactions such as futures , options ( including both buying and writing of options ) and contracts for differences .
12 From that possibility , he goes on to blame bad potty-training for all her character defects .
13 An enchanting picture book by Ian Beck , The Teddy Robber , £6.95 is a wonderfully funny story of a giant who 's lost his teddy bear so he goes around stealing other teddies from wherever he can .
14 Travel Trade Manager Bill Cameron tells Welcome how he goes about promoting Historic Scotland 's heritage sites at home and aboard .
  Next page