Example sentences of "go [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Then we can go on up the highway until we catch them , ’ Hugh suggested . |
2 | How did you go on at the fox hunt today ? |
3 | For a second it looked as though she would go on with the game , but then she stopped smiling and her eyes slid away from his . |
4 | ‘ To keep Bones , would you rather go on with the competition ? ’ |
5 | whether they would go on with the scheme or with a part of it , having the public offices in a well-devised and properly-arranged manner , all connected with each other , instead of being , as now , disconnected . |
6 | The doctor then told Alexander that he must go on with the treatment . |
7 | They laughed so much , they could n't go on with the interview . |
8 | ‘ You must go on with the preparations as though you were alone . |
9 | ‘ I must go on with the post , but I 'll send somebody to help you as soon as I can . |
10 | We are here to have a committee meeting about the Season , and about your attitude , and indeed about whether we can go on with the Season at all . ’ |
11 | Could n't go on with the performance even with the understudies because of the police coming in . |
12 | ‘ We are now in our second recruitment round , and if that does n't succeed we will go on to a third . ’ |
13 | Salvation came from without : the development of some de facto secondary work in the higher ‘ standards ’ or years of Board schools , the improvements in the older grammar schools , the use of various ‘ institutes ’ dedicated to helping working men get more education , the creation of new , civic universities like Owens in Manchester , and the expansion of London University , gave men who wanted a basic education beyond primary school new opportunities , after which they could go on to a denominational college which was now more able to concentrate on theology . |
14 | Then we could go on to a dance in our local Labour Hall ? |
15 | He or she would decide whether cases should go on to a Children 's Hearing before the Children 's Panel , or whether to take no further action . |
16 | The CPU , floating point , instruction and data caches , memory controller and I/O interface will all go on to a single chip . |
17 | Your point is well taken that a percentage of those will go on to a transmural infarct , but I have difficulty in understanding these figures in relation to an expected mortality for sub-endocardial infarction of around 5–6% . |
18 | One can go on to a third group that I did not discuss , " all-ischaemic events " , including non-fatal and fatal reinfarction ; it includes the development of unstable angina , and revascularisation procedures . |
19 | ‘ You ca n't go on to a talk show and talk about the plots of the books . |
20 | Few of Camille 's schoolmates , even had they been able to read and write , would go on to a career in the sciences , since the chemistry lab had been the first to succumb , years back , when the rules had just been relaxed and attitudes to education liberalized . |
21 | ‘ We could go on to a nightclub afterwards . ’ |
22 | Yeah , try those for and er , I mean there , but there , they 'll go on to a similar any way , but just keeping up the enjoyment side and er |
23 | Also , I learned to appreciate that as a critic you say what you have to say and go on to the next thing in LA you never go on to the next thing . ’ |
24 | ‘ You away in and I 'll go on to the hotel by myself . |
25 | Some , however , will go on to the tertiary or ‘ gummatous ’ stage and a few will go on to develop neurological or cardiovascular complications . |
26 | ‘ We 'd better go on to the farm and buy … ’ |
27 | She will now go on to the next leg of the Boots Customer Service Award — the district semi-finals . |
28 | Ron said that I should not go on to the track and kill myself because I might pull a hamstring . |
29 | Then we 'll meet ye all at the Curragh Bar for a few good old jars , and then we 'll go on to the hotel . |
30 | ‘ He should have knocked the guy cold and not let him go on to the fourth round . |