Example sentences of "[verb] go ahead " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I wonder if it might be possible for you to confirm your or NEC 's interest in the tape , and , if you intend to go ahead , the specifications you need .
2 It 's quite usual to pay a deposit to show that you intend to go ahead with the deal and if you back out the repairer is entitled to keep the money .
3 Do you want to go ahead on the lines which have brought prosperity at home ?
4 Do you want to go ahead with the Tuesday stall ?
5 The committee was at first divided over the proposal , with Betty Sinclair opposing the whole idea of protest marches , and a decision was deferred to a later meeting , which agreed to go ahead and fixed the date for 24 August .
6 A good deal has happened since that important Church meeting last June when we agreed to go ahead and purchase the building from the Church of Scotland for £1 .
7 When he agreed to go ahead he could not have been more generous .
8 Eventually they agreed to go ahead , but already 1982 was well advanced .
9 However , district councillors felt that none of the objections justified any changes to the proposed order and agreed to go ahead with the scheme .
10 The principal , Sir David Smith , yesterday stepped up the pressure in the row over ministerial pledges , as the university court agreed to go ahead with up to 28 sackings .
11 Tomorrow 's Lingfield Flat all-weather meeting is the only card expected to go ahead before Friday .
12 And Oriel College will hold its a own memorial service … after the funeral … expected to go ahead early next week .
13 He was , however , disappointed when in 1985 a planned merger with the Imperial Group failed to go ahead .
14 But in practice , if most countries want to go ahead with something , they may well ignore a lone dissenter .
15 Between now and Sunday it 's down to you to decide that you definitely want to go ahead and be confirmed .
16 Now this next Sunday you 're preparing and saying Yes I definitely want to go ahead and be confirmed .
17 is that Tom Farmer and also the Hib 's board seem to on , on on , numerous occasions say they 've no interest in Ingleston , and they want to go ahead with Straiton .
18 Although we might be prepared outside our normal scheme to fund the current year 's training for such people on the understanding that future funding will not be available , so in other words if somebody comes along to you and says , I 'd like to do an M B A , beginning this year , now normally we we would say , yes , we will contribute our half to that cost , er and that would then be a high priority on our budget to provide continued support for the rest of that M B A course , we 're now saying that that the answer is actually no , because we can not provide support next year , we do n't think , er but if you never the less want to go ahead this year and then fund it yourself from then on , then we we have actually got money available which we can use this year .
19 Erm if you want to go ahead with it , pull the top one off ,
20 Now in Oxford erm we actually do n't have any land like that , and the problem was that , even if we had self-build houses on the land which is available at the moment , on which we want to build council houses but we have n't got the money to build council houses , if we were to allow self- build to go ahead on those sites because of the value of the land then the sorts of people who would actually be able to afford them would not be people on low incomes , or even sort of low to medium incomes , they would actually be people who were fairly well off and therefore not the people that we would want to be directing our resources at .
21 I actually advised him at the meeting that he should not and could n't take that motion , and I was by Alderman in that situation , but he still deemed to go ahead and that 's p his prerogative .
22 The government consistently denied rumours of an early poll , claiming that no parliamentary elections would be held before the presidential contest due in April 1991 , although local elections at sub-district level were expected to go ahead in May 1990 , after the success of similar elections in the Chittagong Hill Tracts on June 25 , 1989 ( see p. 36736 ) .
23 She wants to go ahead but she 's afraid she ca n't manage .
24 He wants to go ahead with it .
25 He wants to go ahead .
26 ‘ We expect to go ahead as 12 , ’ a government official said in London .
27 God has gone ahead of us to provide , in the suffering and death of his Son , all the special grace we may individually need to cope with evil and the abuse of love .
28 A number of large projects were discussed , but only one of the Soviet-Japanese projects has gone ahead — the open cast Neryungri coal mine .
29 Despite the fact that the museums in the former USSR were unable to meet their share of the costs after August 1991 , the exhibition has gone ahead with the support of the Kunsthaus in Zurich , in particular its director Felix Baumann , and with most of the financial risk underwritten by George Ortiz himself .
30 Now that MIPS Technologies Inc is in its back pocket , Silicon Graphics Inc has gone ahead and acted on its promise to service MIPS ' OEM business which accounted for the bulk of its revenues .
  Next page