Example sentences of "[not/n't] [verb] go [adv] " in BNC.

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1 She said ; I would not want to go up there .
2 She said ; I would not want to go up there in this wind .
3 The conversation is about how to respond to an invitation to " step outside " at a party : the gist of B's turn is that if someone were to ask her to go outside for " fresh air " at a party , she would not want to go outside for fresh air , and would not go .
4 We should not want to go slower than 1/200th second because of camera movement and , for a bright day , f8 at 1/200th with ASA 200 rated film will give a result .
5 I do not want to go over that ground again ; suffice it to say that we accept the Secretary of State 's assurance that the Government are making a genuine effort to find a mechanism to implement Lord Cullen 's recommendation 30 .
6 ‘ The Bravoes may not want to go around asking questions , they 'll probably just stake out her house .
7 Finally he lay down in the snow and determined to die , for his stamina had failed him and he had not found the Dwarves ; and he did not want to go back to the life of killing he had led .
8 Does my right hon. Friend mean that British industrialists do not want to go back to national plans , solemn and binding undertakings , high inflation , nationalisation , high taxation and trade union unrest ?
9 Industrialists know that that policy was a failure , and they do not want to go back to it .
10 I do not want to go back to the foreign environment of Tbilisi , ’ he said .
11 She said she had liked her flat but would not want to go back there .
12 ‘ With any new scheme there 's bound to be teething problems , but if you look at any other town that has introduced this kind of thing they would not want to go back to what they had previously , ’ he said .
13 It struck Hoomey then that Nails did not want to go home , even — possibly — that he wanted company .
14 I do not want to go too far into the philosophical or even the physiological aspects of the matter .
15 You may not want to go further in your job — perhaps the status you have in your social and personal life may prove sufficient .
16 They would wait five miles ahead , not daring to go further because of my leg .
17 Ben scrabbled at the bank , barking but not daring to go down .
18 One did not need to go up into space to see that Earth 's resources should be used ( though not used up ) for all its inhabitants .
19 Well you feel with the royal family , they do not need to go round visiting hospitals .
20 She did not need to go on .
21 I did not need to go on about Jean-Claude 's obstinacy , foolishness and arrogance .
22 You do not need to go out and buy these .
23 Well , it 's something er I mean obviously a lot of people like the idea of going over to the Swindon Oasis , now er we 've had at the back of our minds , if it was at all possible to er put something similar at Didcot , obviously nothing as grand as the Oasis , but something quite similar , and obviously they would come to Didcot and not bother to go over to Swindon .
24 Now it is not expected to go on much beyond spring of next year .
25 Women and girls were not expected to go off after work and sing in choirs or play games — they were expected to be at home catching up on household chores .
26 You name them , he 's served them , and now Richard , head waiter at Martha 's Vineyard , at the Kirklevington Country Club , Yarm , can not wait to go back to Beverly Hills and the good life .
27 Post-war interviews carried out by the United States Strategic Bombing Survey , confirmed such impressions : one out of three Germans indicated that his morale was affected by bombing more than any other single factor ; nine in ten of those interviewed mentioned bombing as the greatest hardship they had to suffer in the war ; three in five admitted to war-weariness on account of the bombing , and the percentage not wanting to go on with the war was significantly higher in heavily bombed than unbombed towns ; more than two-fifths said they lost hope in German victory when the raids did not stop ; and the percentage of people with confidence in the leadership was fourteen per cent lower in heavily bombed than in unbombed towns .
28 He began to talk again about Stephen handing him the wedding-dress , how he 'd walked away with it and had then sat down on a seat on the promenade , not wanting to go on with his act any more .
29 Until Rose came he had reached the stage of not wanting to go out .
30 I was , simply , not prepared to go on with the discomfort of feeling — or knowing other people might feel — that I was in any way neglecting my family .
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