Example sentences of "[conj] go on " in BNC.

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1 They know our taste in music here , and the whole place rocks until around 5am , when it 's time to retire to the sunrise , tuck into t burger at the Star Club café just outside , or go on and do whatever else you want to do .
2 I remember wondering if it would be better to go back to the West End , for another fare , or go on to Liverpool Street .
3 The pattern of habits we either already have or go on to acquire can fall into types .
4 Or go on in , I do n't mind .
5 You may want to stop using , or go on to substitute drugs .
6 When things go badly wrong , is it best to abort the mission , cut one 's losses and use the resources more effectively elsewhere , or go on trying ?
7 It is possible to take a difficult route back to the line almost immediately , or go on to the next farm and follow a track there .
8 They have given staff in schools the space to meet as a group and get to terms with issues over a longer period , complementing the series of other meetings and team meetings that go on anyway .
9 The Phoenix Arts Centre in Leicester is trying to shake off its persistent image of being just too highbrow for words and it is striving to show the general public that they might actually enjoy some of the things that go on there .
10 Thus book is an attempt to look at some of the things that go on when people face a loss of someone or something significant in their lives .
11 There are few children who do not experience the death of a much-loved grandparent or pet when they are quite young , and yet so often they are excluded from all the changes that go on at the time of a grandparent 's death , as though in some way this will leave them unaffected .
12 The flow chart is not supposed to be rigid or to be adhered to at all costs ; more a source of guidance and reference and a way of keeping check on the different activities that go on simultaneously as you move towards that special day .
13 ‘ You would n't believe some of the things that go on in here .
14 The context-specificity of latent inhibition is not be explained ( or at least , not entirely ) in terms of interference effects that go on during the conditioning phase of the procedure .
15 The imperfections of our parents cause us to generate compensatory emotions that go on influencing us throughout life .
16 Nearly all the undesirable changes that go on in food after it is harvested make it less pleasant , or decidedly horrible , to eat .
17 It 's unusual for me , an Indian man , vis-à-vis the things that go on around my wife .
18 The early eukaryotic cell soon evolved an efficient method of sustaining its own growth , for the properties of a particular cell ( such as its shape and its abilities ) are determined by the chemical processes that go on within it .
19 What are we to make of these coded messages that go on bombarding us in their attempt to break through ?
20 ‘ Most people consolidate their information periodically and report it on a monthly basis : they tend to have huge consolidation exercises that go on for days .
21 And Deviation 's ‘ Hammond Song ’ reminds one of the music they have in those appalling films about surfing that go on for ever , except with a dance beat .
22 Are understanding , believing , knowing , hoping , thinking , intending , attending , things that go on in our minds ( experiences [ 96 ] , mental activities [ 123 ] ) ? ( 72–154 )
23 But within this complete chronology we can discern some processes and states of affairs that are comparatively brief , others that last for an intermediate length of time , and some that go on for centuries or even millennia .
24 Most of these developments might be seen as making English less different , but the kinds of changes that go on in ‘ literary theory ’ are unlikely to be familiar to anyone but a philosopher .
25 I 'd never find out about a lot of things that go on at the hotel without him around .
26 So what kind of people live here that we what 's what 's made it go you you said that it 's got one of the s what are the kind of things that go on now , that wo did n't go on before ?
27 Thinking about language acquisition and skilled language use in terms of the particular forms of information-processing that go on when any linguistic task is being performed , and thinking about language disorders explicitly as patterns of impairments and preservations of different forms of information-processing , thus provides a particularly powerful way of illuminating both normal and disordered linguistic capacities .
28 Thus an organisation may need departmental or unit charts to show all the jobs and tasks that go on within an organisation ;
29 such a vertical representation tells us nothing about the relationships that go on between the centre and field offices .
30 ( 3 ) Why did the universe start out with so nearly the critical rate of expansion that separates models that recollapse from those that go on expanding forever , so that even now , ten thousand million years later , it is still expanding at nearly the critical rate ?
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