Example sentences of "[Wh pn] [verb] [adv] go " in BNC.

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1 There are others who are n't even dancing : one who has just gone over to the veranda and plunged his hand into the vat of boiling oil so he could offer a hot puri to a child in tears : another who is standing in the midst of the dancers being continually buffeted as they come and go , and hungrily eating a plateful of raw rice grains .
2 Lorcan Wyer who has since gone on to become one of the most stylish jockeys in England was associated with most of the Scott winners in those days .
3 For anyone who has never gone ‘ a-rabbiting ’ , I must say I thoroughly enjoyed it .
4 ‘ Diana is an Uptown girl who has never gone in for downtown men , ’ observes Rory Scott .
5 So people who 'd either gone to the football or
6 ‘ Tell that to the only child of a respected Madrid family who 'd already gone against her parents ’ wishes to fly . ’
7 Guy Thomas , who 'd actually gone to RADA , gave me a book on breathing .
8 With the most impressive efficiency and a phone call to Tucson , the American Express Office in Avenida del Sol issued me with a fresh set after half an hour 's verification : necessary , Ian told me , because there are so many freeloaders who keep on going by selling their cheques and claiming they have been stolen .
9 One small corpse found recently in a fashionable district bore the warning : ‘ I kill all those who do n't go to school . ’
10 There are children who do n't go to school — the national figures are that roughly 150,000 children do not attend school in the primary school age group .
11 There are still 12,000 people in our small area who do n't go to any of the four or five churches .
12 Particularly among those who do n't go to church — ’ he eyed Peter — ‘ but might ? ’
13 The North West has become a mecca for motorcycling enthusiasts as well as a special week-end for thousands of people who do n't go to any other event during the year .
14 Maybe fire is the opposite principle to light , and comes to the use of those who do not go the way of light .
15 Mrs Thatcher said that pay review bodies were only ‘ given to those who do not go on strike , like the nurses ’ , and that some ‘ militant ’ ambulancemen wanted to withdraw the emergency service across the country to force through their pay claim .
16 Two upper floors together accommodate nearly 2,200 men , each having his numbered place with table , while adjacent staff premises contain steam ovens , tea and coffee brewing and usual appliances for meeting the needs of those workmen who do not go home for meals during the day .
17 Conversely , sixty-three per cent of those who do not go to church report that none of their friends or acquaintances has ever invited them ’ ( McGavran and Hunter 1980:33 , 34 ) .
18 After all , amongst the girls who do not obtain the top 16+ grades , or who do not go on to do A level mathematics , are some very able pupils .
19 provide a general education for those who do not go to grammar schools , usually up to the minimum school leaving age ( though pupils can stay on longer ) .
20 to a particular institution but who do not go on to enrol there or anywhere else ( we have called them ‘ non-enrollers ’ )
21 Those students who do not go on to do postgraduate degrees in Social Anthropology may enter a wide range of occupations and professions , both nationally and internationally .
22 Fairley is especially concerned with the difference between " literal " readers , who do not go beyond the surface meaning of the text , and " figurative " readers , who seem to have internalised a number of conventions of reading which enable them to reach less obvious and more satisfactory interpretative results .
23 I want us to think for a moment about the rights and needs of all those millions of children who do not go to school , who are invisible because very often development programmes tend to ignore er their needs .
24 They saw themselves as being responsible people who did not go on strike for trivial benefits such as a tea-break but , at the same time , also saw themselves as a little bit downtrodden , almost persecuted .
25 The testers might have got a clue from this that such a question was entirely artificial , constructed out of test situations and irrelevant to children who did not go to school and so were not used to being exposed to such tests .
26 Both the housing department and housing associations had helped with accommodation , and the social work team had started luncheon clubs and drop in centres for people with learning disabilities who did not go to day centres .
27 During the 1940s and 1950s , when the concept of ‘ maternal deprivation ’ was growing in popularity and links were being made between it and juvenile delinquency , Professor Zweig still found National Assistance officials ready to label the widow with school-age children who did not go out to work as an ‘ inferior type ’ and a ‘ professional ’ widow .
28 Further it suggested that of those people who did not go to a lawyer , a higher proportion had received help from outside the household , and of that group only one-quarter had received advice to go to a lawyer which they had ignored Such contrary evidence does not denigrate the value of pre-legal advice , but suggests that , as would be expected , it is not the only significant factor in determining whether , and if so why and how , people seek legal advice .
29 He then reminisced about a house-party at which someone had suggested that Mr Eliot ( who did not go to many such parties ) should be invited to read some of his poems .
30 Under attack on all sides , not least from the infant population which was itself unwittingly helping to spread disease through the narrow streets and alleys of the town , some Frome people found a temporary escape in one or other of the forty or more pubs which vied with each other for custom ; drunkenness was commonplace , and many of those who did n't go to an early grave with some infection or other departed this life with a putrid liver .
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