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

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1 But he goes down a treat at the annual summer conference of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales .
2 It goes down a treat at family do 's . )
3 This sort of feeble whining goes down a treat with women like Alison .
4 Despite subtitles which obviously struggle to get the profane poetry of Tarantino 's script , the film goes down a storm with the festival audience , though the torture does send some people scurrying for the door , among them one Wes Craven , director of the first Elm Street movie and much else .
5 If the red ball goes down the edge of the white ball ?
6 While the deal goes down the rest of them wait next door .
7 They may go down the field below the cave to a gate on the Kingsdale road which , followed to the left , goes over a rise to Deepdale and Dent , and to the right leads down the valley to the more probable destination of Ingleton which has accommodation , shops , refreshments and bus services .
8 The interim dividend goes up a fraction to 3.1p , from 2.9p .
9 The interim dividend goes up a fraction to 3.1p , from 2.9p .
10 ‘ The cry goes up every morning to Rob , ’ sniggers Fred .
11 ‘ The one that goes up the back of Monument Hill . ’
12 As a result , it looks as though any rethink of this weekend goes up the spout in favour of the ghastliness of paper for the beastly bureaucrats .
13 MPS HAVE called on the government to force electricity boards to use the heat that goes up the chimneys of Britain 's power stations .
14 Notice how the grain goes up the body of Teddy , and his elbow nestles in the cushion
15 My mum goes out every Sunday for lunch .
16 Westminster goes out every Tuesday to Friday at 8.15am for 45 minutes , and on Mondays for 15 minutes .
17 Of course the trouble with boats on a rising tide is that when the tide goes out a lot of those boats are left high and dry .
18 ‘ Elise goes out a lot on Sundays , ’ remarked Penry .
19 I believe your credibility goes out the window for a start .
20 Of course , these are not the same sort of friends that she might have met on her débutante rounds or at Royal Ascot , but as she says , social class goes out the window beyond the prison walls .
21 We 're walking past this telly shop when Marie suddenly stops and goes back a couple of steps .
22 So the the Yes it 's been going back a the the name , the firm in that sense I think goes back a lot of years .
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