Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [verb] in " in BNC.

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1 That it goes on moving in a straight line , rather than in circles , followed from what Descartes described as the immutability and simplicity of the conserving operation .
2 But the language your correspondent then goes on to use in her letter belies her true position — that of a supporter of the status quo and of the present head teacher .
3 Part of the overall argument of this book is that , as the Roman catholic church is principal validator or legitimator of the Southern state along with the concept of the national entity , what that state goes on to do in the field of social ethics can not be separated out from the responsibilities of the church .
4 As Miles Davis , now 63 , goes on developing , his most assiduous young admirer , Wynton Marsalis , goes on backtracking in search of his roots , taking other potentially excellent young players with him .
5 A few months later , as Emile de Laveleye goes on to say in this essay of 1871 , the Franco-Prussian war broke out , setting in motion the sequence of European conflicts which led , ultimately , to the obliteration of the centre of Berlin in 1945 .
6 And I 've always heard what Jesus goes on to say in the context of that understanding of the text .
7 And he goes on to reveal in the letter that he had just taken a day off ‘ work ’ to watch a Tennessee high school football game with Ginger Alden , the 20-year-old Tennessee beauty queen who bore a startling resemblance to his mother and whom he called ‘ little Gladys ’ .
8 ( Hu Yaobang and his family , for example , were allowed to carry on living in the privileged conditions of Zhongnanhai and Fang Lizhi was still allowed to travel abroad . )
9 Even after the adoption of prerecording , ‘ cut keys ’ were still used , the artist being encouraged to carry on acting in character until the prompt was given , thereby reducing editing time .
10 And is going to carry on collecting in those areas .
11 ‘ Some even have to carry on sleeping in the same bed — back to back in angry silence .
12 A book like that , it 's a great temptation fur a journalist who knows so much he 's scared to go on livin' in his own country . ’
13 Although work is pretty thin on the ground for the construction labourer , he plans to go on living in Pontypridd until the end of next season , and then decide where to stay in this country .
14 David began to think that it might be possible to go on living in the same house as Julia and Anthony without either betraying himself or suffering unendurable frustration .
15 But I would hope , I mean it has given me the the wish to go on living in a similar kind of situation .
16 It was the coldest winter for years , but Tess and Marian had to go on working in the snow .
17 What I want to go on to discuss in the , in the last part of the lecture is another way in which Freud 's work looks , looks backwards , or seems to look backwards .
18 ‘ It was always my intention to go on playing in club competition with Constitution after finishing my international career and to that extent , I am disappointed by the way things have worked out , ’ Lenihan said .
19 I mean in says in twenty-eight that , that the quality co-ordinator 's responsible for maintaining for example , master lists of procedures , so .
20 Oh yes yes er I should say that er Street er Street then you get into Palfrey now you see Palfrey was a little bit less due to the fact that there were a hell of a lot of railway men at work down there , I mean really all belonging to some department on the railway , you get er drivers and all the men and the permanent way of being in Street I mean a lot of people from Palfrey lived down lived in Palfrey was working in the permanent way in Street , so it was a really , Palfrey you could say was a railway community .
21 Taylor refuses to say whether Lineker would still be in his team had he carried on playing in England .
22 The four study populations reported on differ in their dates of birth as well as in their ages , with the oldest study populations being born earliest .
23 So the next of the packages to wander through rejoices in the title Fun Pack — it 's obviously not a word processor , but it may just interest you a little .
24 Many , ranging from large estates to small-holdings in towns , were given by him to his French supporters and to those English whom he could tempt over to settle in northern France .
25 Despite their chefs ' and St Trinians outfits , they managed to clamber up poles and leap over jumps in relay and raise more than £400 for charity .
26 She had dropped off to sleep in spite of herself , and now it was a black night with a wind getting up that was making the beech trees creak and rattling a shutter on one of the upper windows .
27 No luck this time , only a couple of redshanks take fright and fly off yelping in alarm , and a female merganser swims among the thongweed , head poking under the water to look for small fish .
28 Gardiner heads off to ban in good mood
29 Indeed , so popular were the Pathfinders characters that several of them were hived off to appear in another children 's sf serial , City Beneath the Sea , a well written technological thriller penned by John Lucarotti .
30 The Land Rover pulled into the ambulance unloading bay at the hospital and then moved off to wait in the staff car park while Donaldson took Mrs Balanchine to the men 's ward .
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