Example sentences of "go [adv prt] as " in BNC.

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1 I believe it to have been factually true that Crossman 's ambition to gain and retain Cabinet office was the aspiration to be in a position to observe what goes on as an academic or a philosopher observes .
2 Gala goes on as opera ban ends .
3 The track goes on as a pleasant lane beyond Calf Holes , coming alongside a belt of trees on the left and arriving after a mile at the sixteenth-century Ling Gill Bridge , a modest structure with a tablet built into parapet giving the information that it was repaired in 1765 at the expense of the inhabitants of the West Riding .
4 Many of Stenhouse 's objections arise out of other people 's oversimplifications , and it is of course true that we know very little of what actually goes on as a result of our work with students .
5 Cos there 's a lot of this maintenance thing that goes on as
6 And what started as a language-game had to go on as a lie , or a myth .
7 I says er , I want to go on as yard foreman next week .
8 and then they 'll just pick one out of that to go on as part of the calendar .
9 Well I mean for the first year she wo n't be in if she goes in as a student she 'll be in college .
10 He 's asked me to go along as wardrobe mistress , I said I 'd think about it but I ca n't stand the heat .
11 ‘ We 're desperate to put that right because we do n't want to go down as one-season wonders .
12 The Wilhelmshaven dockyard had been , in its day , the largest naval yard in Europe , and is likely to go down as the largest purely naval yard in history .
13 Er an and the the bloke who did it erm has got to go down as one of the ratbags of the year .
14 what would you like to go down as a scrubber ?
15 Mark Cameron ( 1987 ) felt that the knot symbolized possession by a man , a token of the collective sacred marriage which all young people had to go through as the culmination of their initiation sequence .
16 The rest would have to go off as wage-labourers to the Lowlands .
17 The Civil Aviation Committee met the next day and challenged two parts of the draft agreement that the Americans had inserted : the right of civil aircraft to use the US-leased bases in the Caribbean and Atlantic , and the right of US airlines to ‘ change gauge ’ in Britain , that is , switch to smaller aircraft for flights going on as part of the fifth freedom .
18 Work going on as part of the resource management initiative is designed to overcome this problem , and eventually it will produce the information that is lacking .
19 ‘ People are going on as if there is a crisis at Blackburn because we have n't won for seven weeks , but we 've only been beaten twice this season and if that 's a crisis God help us . ’
20 I found myself opening the batting and going on as change bowler with my medium pace .
21 Negotiations over the final contract were still going on as the first DinDisc releases appeared .
22 She was going on as if she loved the fucking man , not just the fucking !
23 But failure to appreciate the force of this distinction can also shipwreck attempts by observers to understand religion — to read correctly what is going on as a person performs a religious ritual or speaks religious words ( see Chapter 10 where an assessment task on this is suggested ) .
24 But , you know , they 're just being going on as if they are i in a position to grant
25 Yeah you 're going on as if , you started off on the fact that you do n't think we 've got any fear of them cos their kids are running round on the street and now all of sudden you say we have because they 've got nuclear weapons you say .
26 Going along as a small independent with just a few programmes to your name does render you relatively powerless .
27 While the Prince of Banality is going down as the embodiment of Eighties vulgarity and hype , the museum world and the academy are singing his praises .
28 I spent an afternoon in Sunderland with an old miner in his eighties , who was n't a club man or active in the union , with this lovely voice , talking about first going down as a trapper — he sat all day when he was thirteen by the trap doors which the paddy wagons carrying coal had to pass through , all day in the pitch dark .
29 The words which I have read are plain : it was Mr. Vanbergen who said he was going down to Eastbourne , that he was going down as part of his business , and that he did not think he would be getting back after his business on Thursday in time to pay it on Thursday , and the concession arose out of the question whether or not the debtor could be back in town in time to bring it himself , because he frankly said he was trying to get a little more time .
30 Because there is every possibility that if the fund payers determine quality , they will tend to overlook areas in which quality is going down as a result of financial pressures —
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